The Dharma incomparably profound and exquisiteIs rarely met with, even in hundreds of thousands of millions of eons
I am now able to see, listen, accept and hold it;
I vow to understand the true meaning of the Tathagatas' wonderful teachings.
*
Please listen
attentively!
I take refuge in
Vairocana Buddha
(1)
I take refuge in
the Diamond Buddhas of the Ten Directions
I bow to the Bodhisattva Maitreya,
who will descend to earth and become a Buddha.
I shall now
recite the Three Root
Precepts
All Bodhisattvas
should pay heed.
The precepts are a light
shining brightly
Dispelling the
darkness of the night.
The precepts are
a precious mirror
Clearly
reflecting one and all.
The precepts are
a wish-fulfilling gem
(2)
Showering
treasures upon the destitute.
To escape
suffering and attain Buddhahood swiftly
These precepts
are the supreme way.
Therefore,
Bodhisattvas
Should keep them
steadfastly.
It is now
springtime (or summer or
winter). Four months make a season. (3) Half a month
(or one
month, one month and a half, two months, etc.) has elapsed, less one night
(or plus
one night). Three and a half months remain (orthree months, two and a
half months, two months, etc.).
Old age and death
weigh upon us. The Dharma will soon disappear. Most Virtuous Ones (Upasaka/Upasika)!
To attain Enlightenment, practice diligently and singlemindedly. By practicing
diligently and singlemindedly, all the Buddhas attain Supreme, Perfect
Enlightenment -- not to mention other virtues.
Seek the Dharma
diligently while young and healthy. How can you fail to seek the Way and,
unguarded, let old age overtake you? What pleasures are you still
awaiting?
Answer: Yes, it
is (by the
monk in charge).
Question: Is the
Sangha united and harmonious?
Answer: Yes, it
is united and harmonious.
Question: Why has
the Sangha gathered?
Answer: To recite
the Bodhisattva precepts.
Question: Have
those who have not taken the precepts and those who are not pure left this
assembly?
Answer: In this
assembly, there is no one who has not taken the precepts, and no one who is not
pure. (If
there are, they should be asked to leave and the monk in charge should say:
"Those who have not received the precepts and those who are not pure have
left.")
Question: How
many are there of pure mind who wish to attend but cannot and have asked others
to represent them?
(6)
Answer: In this
assembly, there is no one of pure mind who wishes to attend but cannot and is
represented by another (or, if there is, the
representative should step forward to state his name and that of the absent monk
and confirm that the absent monk is pure and would have wished to be in
attendance.)
IV Most Virtuous
Ones (or
Upasaka/Upasika)! Listen attentively: In this Dharma-Ending Age following
the demise of the Buddha, we should reverently keep the Pratimoksa. (7) The Pratimoksa is
none other than these precepts. Those who keep these precepts are like wanderers
in the dark stumbling upon a light, like the destitute coming upon a treasure,
like the sick finding a cure, like prisoners set free, like wanderers
discovering the way home. Let it be understood that the precepts are a worthy
teacher to us all, as though the Buddha were still here among us.
If we do not fear
transgressions, it is difficult to develop a wholesome mind. Therefore, the
sutras contain this teaching: Do not regard a minor misdeed as inconsequential.
In time, drops of water may fill a large vessel. Offenses committed in a moment,
may result in eons of suffering in the hells. Once the human state is lost, it
may not be regained for myriads of lifetimes.
Youth is like a
galloping horse. Our life is more fleeting than the waters of a mountain stream.
Today we are alive; tomorrow, who knows? Let each of us practice diligently and
singlemindedly. Do not be lax; guard against laziness. Do not indulge in rest
and sleep. During the night, singlemindedly recite the Buddha's name and
meditate. You should never while away the time, causing deep regret in the
future.
Members of the
assembly! Keep these precepts singlemindedly and respectfully; study them and
cultivate in accordance with the Dharma.
Most Virtuous
Ones (or
Upasaka/Upasika)! Today is the fifteenth (or fourteenth) day
of the month; the moon is full (or is not full). We
are holding the Uposatha
service, (8)
reciting the Bodhisattva precepts. Members of the assembly should listen
attentively.
Whoever has
transgressed, confess now. Otherwise, remain silent. By your silence, I shall
know that this assembly is pure and may recite the precepts.
Now that I have
finished the preamble to the Bodhisattva precepts, I ask you once more, members
of the assembly, are you pure? (three times)
Members of the
assembly, by your silence I know that you are pure. This is something of which
you should all be aware.
Homage to the
Brahma Net Assembly of Bodhisattvas and Buddhas (three
times).
Based on Kumarajiva's text
At that time, Vairocana Buddha
began speaking in general about the Mind-Ground for the benefit of the Great
Assembly. What he said represents but an infinitesimal part, the tip of a hair,
of His innumerable teachings -- as numerous as the grains of sand in the river
Ganges.
He concluded: "The Mind-Ground has
been explained, is being explained and will be explained by all the Buddhas --
past, present, and future. It is also the Dharma Door (cultivation method) that
all the Bodhisattvas of the past, present, and future have studied, are studying
and will study."
"I have cultivated this
Mind-Ground Dharma Door for hundreds of eons. My name is Vairocana. I request
all Buddhas to transmit my words to all sentient beings, so as to open this path
of cultivation to all."
At that time, from his Lion's
Throne in the Lotus Treasury
World, Vairocana Buddha emitted rays of light. A voice among the rays is
heard telling the Buddhas seated on thousands of lotus petals, "You should
practice and uphold the Mind-Ground Dharma Door and transmit it to the
innumerable Sakyamuni Buddhas, (10) one after
another, as well as to all sentient beings. Everyone should uphold, read,
recite, and singlemindedly put its teachings into practice."
After receiving the Dharma-door of
the Mind-Ground, the Buddhas seated atop the thousands of lotus flowers along
with the innumerable Sakyamuni Buddhas all arose from their Lion seats, their
bodies emitting innumerable rays of light. In each of these rays appeared
innumerable Buddhas who simultaneously made offerings of green, yellow, red and
white celestial flowers to Vairocana Buddha. They then slowly took their
leave.
The Buddhas then disappeared from
the Lotus Treasury World, entered the Essence-Nature Empty Space Floral
Brilliance Samadhi and returned to their former places under the Bodhi-tree in
this world of Jambudvipa.
They then arose from their samadhi, sat on their Diamond Thrones in Jambudvipa
and the Heaven of the Four Kings, and preached the Dharma of the "Ten Oceans of
Worlds."
Thereupon, they ascended to Lord
Shakya's palace and expounded the "Ten Dwellings," proceeded to the Suyama
Heaven and taught the "Ten Practices," proceeded further to the Fourth Heaven
and taught the "Ten Dedications," proceeded further to the Transformation of
Bliss Heaven and taught the "Ten Dhyana Samadhi," proceeded further to the
Heaven of Comfort From Others' Emanations and taught the "Ten Grounds,"
proceeded further to the First Dhyana Heaven and taught the "Ten Vajra Stages," proceeded
further to the Second Dhyana Heaven and taught the "Ten Patiences," and
proceeded further to the Third Dhyana Heaven and taught the "Ten Vows." Finally,
in the Fourth Dhyana Heaven, at Lord Brahma's Palace, they taught the
"Mind-Ground Dharma-Door" chapter, which Vairocana Buddha, in eons past,
expounded in the Lotus Treasury World (the cosmos).
All the other innumerable
transformation Sakyamuni Buddhas did likewise in their respective worlds as the
chapter "Auspicious Kalpa" has explained.
At that time, Sakyamuni Buddha,
after first appearing in the Lotus Treasury World, proceeded to the east and
appeared in the Heavenly King's palace to teach the "Demon Transforming Sutra."
He then descended to Jambudvipa to be born in Kapilavastu -- his name being
Siddhartha and his father's name Suddhodana. His mother was Queen Maya. He
achieved Enlightenment at the age of thirty, after seven years of cultivation,
under the name of Sakyamuni Buddha. (11)
The Buddha spoke in ten assemblies
from the Diamond Seat at Bodhgaya to the palace of Brahma.
At that time, he contemplated the
wonderful Jewel Net
(12) hung in Lord Brahma's palace and preached the Brahma Net
Sutra for the Great Assembly. He said:
"The innumerable worlds in the
cosmos are like the eyes of the net. Each and every world is different, its
variety infinite. So too are the Dharma Doors (methods of cultivation) taught by
the Buddhas.
"I have come to this world eight
thousand times. Based in this Saha World, seated upon the Jeweled Diamond Seat
in Bodhgaya and all the way up to the palace of the Brahma King, I have spoken
in general about the Mind-Ground Dharma Door for the benefit of the great
multitude.
(13)
"Thereafter, I descended from the
Brahma King's palace to Jambudvipa, the Human World. I have preached the Diamond
Illuminated Jeweled Precepts (the Bodhisattva
precepts) from beneath the Bodhi-tree for the sake of all sentient beings on
earth, however dull and ignorant they may be. These precepts were customarily
recited by Vairocana Buddha when he first developed the Bodhi Mind in the causal
stages. They are precisely the original source of all Buddhas and all
Bodhisattvas as well as the seed of the Buddha Nature.
"All sentient beings possess this
Buddha Nature. All with consciousness, form, and mind are encompassed by the
precepts of the Buddha Nature. Sentient beings possess the correct cause of the
Buddha Nature and therefore they will assuredly attain the ever-present Dharma
Body.
For this reason, the ten Pratimoksa (Bodhisattva)
precepts came into being in this world. These precepts belong to the True
Dharma. They are received and upheld in utmost reverence by all sentient beings
of the Three Periods of Time -- past, present and future.
"Once again, I shall preach for
the Great Assembly the chapter on the Inexhaustible Precept Treasury. These are
the precepts of all sentient beings, the source of the pure Self-Nature."
Now, I, Vairocana Buddha
Am sitting atop a lotus
pedestal;
On a thousand flowers surrounding
me
Are a thousand Sakyamuni
Buddhas.
Each flower supports a hundred
million worlds;
In each world a Sakyamuni Buddha
appears.
All are seated beneath a
Bodhi-tree,
All simultaneously attain
Buddhahood.
All these innumerable
Buddhas
Have Vairocana as their original
body.
These countless Sakyamuni
Buddhas
All bring followers along -- as
numerous as
motes of dust.
They all proceed to my lotus
pedestal
To listen to the Buddha's
precepts.
I now preach the Dharma, this
exquisite nectar.
Afterward, the countless Buddhas
return to
their respective worlds
And, under a Bodhi-tree, proclaim
these
major and minor precepts
Of Vairocana, the Original
Buddha.
The precepts are like the radiant
sun and moon,
Like a shining necklace of
gems,
Bodhisattvas as numerous as motes
of dust
Uphold them and attain
Buddhahood.
These precepts are recited by
Vairocana,
These precepts I recite as
well.
You novice Bodhisattvas
Should reverently accept and
uphold them.
And once you have done so,
Transmit and teach them to
sentient beings.
(14)
Now listen attentively as I
recite
The Bodhisattva Pratimoksa -- the
source of all precepts in the Buddha Dharma.
All of you in the Great Assembly
should firmly believe
That you are the Buddhas of the
future,
While I am a Buddha already
accomplished.
If you should have such faith at
all times,
Then this precept code is
fulfilled.
(15)
All beings with resolve
Should accept and uphold the
Buddha's precepts.
Sentient beings on receiving
them
Join forthwith the ranks of
Buddhas.
They are in essence equal to the
Buddhas,
They are the true offspring of the
Buddhas.
Therefore, Great Assembly,
Listen with utmost
reverence
As I proclaim the Bodhisattva
Moral Code.
At that time, when Sakyamuni
Buddha first attained Supreme Enlightenment under the Bodhi tree, he explained
the Bodhisattva precepts. The Buddha taught filial piety toward one's
parents, (16)
Elder Masters and the Triple
Jewel. Filial piety and obedience, he said, are the Ultimate Path [to
Buddhahood].
(17) Filial piety is called the precepts -- and it means restraint and
cessation.
(18)
The Buddha then emitted limitless
lights from his mouth. Thereupon, the whole Great Assembly, consisting of
innumerable Bodhisattvas, the gods of the eighteen Brahma Heavens, the gods of
the six Desire Heavens, and the rulers of the sixteen great kingdoms (19) all joined
their palms and listened singlemindedly to the Buddha recite the Mahayana
precepts.
The Buddha then said to the
Bodhisattvas: Twice a month I recite the precepts observed by all Buddhas. All
Bodhisattvas, from those who have just developed the Bodhi Mind to the
Bodhisattvas of the Ten Dwellings, the Ten Practices, the Ten Dedications, and
the Ten Grounds also recite them. Therefore, this precept-light shines forth
from my mouth. It does not arise without a cause. This light is neither blue,
yellow, red, white, nor black. It is neither form, nor thought. It is neither
existent nor nonexistent, neither cause nor effect. (20) This
precept-light is precisely the original source of all Buddhas and all members of
this Great Assembly. Therefore all you disciples of the Buddha should receive
and observe, read, recite and study these precepts with utmost attention.
Disciples of the Buddha, listen
attentively! Whoever can understand and accept a Dharma Master's words of
transmission can receive the Bodhisattva precepts (21) and be called
foremost in purity.
(22) This is true whether that person is a king, a prince, an
official, a monk, a nun, or a god of the eighteen Brahma Heavens, a god of the
six Desire Heavens, or a human, a eunuch, a libertine, a prostitute, a slave, or
a member of the Eight
Divisions of Divinities, a Vajra spirit, an animal, or
even a transformation-being. (23)
The Buddhas said to his disciples,
"There are ten major Bodhisattva precepts. If one receives the precepts but
fails to recite them, he is not a Bodhisattva, nor is he a seed of Buddhahood.
I, too, recite these precepts.
"All Bodhisattvas have studied
them in the past, will study in the future, and are studying them now. I have
explained the main characteristics of the Bodhisattva precepts. You should study
and observe them with all your heart."
The Buddha continued:
A disciple of the Buddha shall not
himself kill, encourage others to kill, kill by expedient means, praise killing,
rejoice at witnessing killing, or kill through incantation or deviant mantras.
He must not create the causes, conditions, methods, or karma of killing, and
shall not intentionally kill any living creature. (24)
As a Buddha's disciple, he ought
to nurture a mind of compassion and filial piety, always devising expedient means to
rescue and protect all beings. If instead, he fails to restrain himself and
kills sentient beings without mercy, he commits a Parajika (major)
offense.
(25)
A disciple of the Buddha must not
himself steal or encourage others to steal, steal by expedient means, steal by
means of incantation or deviant mantras. He should not create the causes,
conditions, methods, or karma of stealing. No valuables or possessions, even
those belonging to ghosts and spirits or thieves and robbers, be they as small
as a needle or blade of grass, may be stolen.
As a Buddha's disciple, he ought
to have a mind of mercy, compassion, and filial piety -- always helping people
earn merits and achieve happiness. If instead, he steals the possessions of
others, he commits a Parajika offense. (26)
A disciple of the Buddha must not
engage in licentious acts or encourage others to do so. [As a monk] he should
not have sexual relations with any female -- be she a human, animal, deity or
spirit -- nor create the causes, conditions, methods, or karma of such
misconduct. Indeed, he must not engage in improper sexual conduct with
anyone.
(27)
A Buddha's disciple ought to have
a mind of filial piety -- rescuing all sentient beings and instructing them in
the Dharma of purity and chastity. If instead, he lacks compassion and
encourages others to engage in sexual relations promiscuously, including with
animals and even their mothers, daughters, sisters, or other close relatives, he
commits a Parajika offense. (28)
A disciple of the Buddha must not
himself use false words and speech, or encourage others to lie or lie by
expedient means. He should not involve himself in the causes, conditions,
methods, or karma of lying, saying that he has seen what he has not seen or
vice-versa, or lying implicitly through physical or mental means. (29)
As a Buddha's disciple, he ought
to maintain Right Speech and Right Views always, and lead all others to maintain
them as well. If instead, he causes wrong speech, wrong views or evil karma in
others, he commits a Parajika offense.
A disciple of the Buddha must not
trade in alcoholic beverages or encourage others to do so. He should not create
the causes, conditions, methods, or karma of selling any intoxicant whatsoever,
for intoxicants are the causes and conditions of all kinds of offenses.
As a Buddha's disciple, he ought
to help all sentient beings achieve clear wisdom. If instead, he causes them to
have upside-down, topsy-turvy thinking, he commits a Parajika offense. (30)
A disciple of the Buddha must not
himself broadcast the misdeeds or infractions of Bodhisattva-clerics or
Bodhisattva-laypersons, or of [ordinary] monks and nuns -- nor encourage others
to do so. He must not create the causes, conditions, methods, or karma of
discussing the offenses of the assembly.
As a Buddha's disciple, whenever
he hears evil persons, externalists or
followers of the Two
Vehicles speak of practices contrary to the Dharma or contrary to the
precepts within the Buddhist community, he should instruct them with a
compassionate mind and lead them to develop wholesome faith in the
Mahayana.
If instead, he discusses the
faults and misdeeds that occur within the assembly, he commits a Parajika
offense.
(31)
A disciple of the Buddha shall not
praise himself and speak ill of others, or encourage others to do so. He must
not create the causes, conditions, methods, or karma of praising himself and
disparaging others.
As a disciple of the Buddha, he
should be willing to stand in for all sentient beings and endure humiliation and
slander -- accepting blame and letting sentient beings have all the glory. If
instead, he displays his own virtues and conceals the good points of others,
thus causing them to suffer slander, he commits a Parajika offense. (32)
A disciple of the Buddha must not
be stingy or encourage others to be stingy. He should not create the causes,
conditions, methods, or karma of stinginess. As a Bodhisattva, whenever a
destitute person comes for help, he should give that person what he needs. If
instead, out of anger and resentment, (33) he denies all
assistance -- refusing to help with even a penny, a needle, a blade of grass,
even a single sentence or verse or a phrase of Dharma, but instead scolds and
abuses that person -- he commits a Parajika offense.
A disciple of the Buddha shall not
harbor anger or encourage others to be angry. He should not create the causes,
conditions, methods, or karma of anger.
As a disciple of the Buddha, he
ought to be compassionate and filial, helping all sentient beings develop the
good roots of non-contention. If instead, he insults and abuses sentient beings,
or even transformation beings [such as deities and spirits], with harsh words,
hitting them with his fists or feet, or attacking them with a knife or club --
or harbors grudges even when the victim confesses his mistakes and humbly seeks
forgiveness in a soft, conciliatory voice -- the disciple commits a Parajika
offense.
(34)
A Buddha's disciple shall not
himself speak ill of the Triple Jewel or encourage others to do so. He must not
create the causes, conditions, methods or karma of slander. If a disciple hears
but a single word of slander against the Buddha from externalists or evil
beings, he experiences a pain similar to that of three hundred spears piercing
his heart. How then could he possibly slander the Triple Jewel himself?
Hence, if a disciple lacks faith
and filial piety towards the Triple Jewel, and even assists evil persons or
those of aberrant views to slander the Triple Jewel, he commits a Parajika
offense.
(35)
As a disciple of the Buddha, you
should study these ten parajika (major) precepts and not break any one of them
in even the slightest way -- much less break all of them! Anyone guilty of doing
so cannot develop the Bodhi Mind in his current life and will lose whatever high
position he may have attained, be it that of an emperor, Wheel-Turning King, Bhiksu,
Bhiksuni -- as well as whatever level of Bodhisattvahood he may have reached,
whether the Ten Dwellings, the Ten Practices, the Ten Dedications, the Ten
Grounds -- and all the fruits of the eternal Buddha Nature. He will lose all of
those levels of attainment and descend into the Three Evil Realms,
unable to hear the words "parents" or "Triple Jewel" for eons! (36) Therefore,
Buddha's disciples should avoid breaking any one of these major precepts. (37) All of you
Bodhisattvas should study and observe the Ten Precepts, which have been
observed, are being observed, and will be observed by all Bodhisattvas. They
were explained in detail in the chapter, "The Eighty Thousand Rules of
Conduct."
(38)
Then the Buddha told the
Bodhisattvas, "Now that I have explained the Ten Major Precepts, I will speak
about the forty-eight secondary precepts."
A disciple of the Buddha who is
destined to become an emperor, a Wheel-Turning King, or high
official should first receive the Bodhisattva precepts. He will then be under
the protection of all guardian deities and spirits, and the Buddhas will be
pleased.
(39)
Once he has received the precepts,
the disciple should develop a mind of filial piety and respect. Whenever he
meets an Elder Master, a monk, or a fellow cultivator of like views and like
conduct, he should rise and greet him with respect. He must then respectfully
make offerings to the guest-monks, in accord with the Dharma. (40) He should be
willing to pledge himself, his family, as well as his kingdom, cities, jewels
and other possessions.
If instead, he should develop
conceit or arrogance, delusion or anger, refusing to rise and greet guest-monks
and make offerings to them respectfully, in accordance with the Dharma, he
commits a secondary offense.
A disciple of the Buddha should
not intentionally consume alcoholic beverages, as they are the source of
countless offenses. If he but offers a glass of wine to another person, his
retribution will be to have no hands for five hundred lifetimes. (41) How could he
then consume liquor himself! Indeed, a Bodhisattva should not encourage any
person or any other sentient being to consume alcohol, much less take any
alcoholic beverages himself. (42) A disciple
should not drink any alcoholic beverages whatsoever. If instead, he deliberately
does so or encourages others to do so, he commits a secondary offense.
A disciple of the Buddha must not
deliberately eat meat. He should not eat the flesh of any sentient being. The
meat-eater forfeits the seed of Great Compassion, severs the seed of the Buddha
Nature and causes [animals and transcendental] beings to avoid him. Those who do
so are guilty of countless offenses. Therefore, Bodhisattvas should not eat the
flesh of any sentient beings whatsoever. If instead, he deliberately eats meat,
he commits a secondary offense. (43)
A disciple of the Buddha should
not eat the five pungent herbs -- garlic, chives, leeks, onions, and
asafoetida.
(44) This is so even if they are added as flavoring to other main
dishes. (45)
Hence, if he deliberately does so, he commits a secondary offense.
If a disciple of the Buddha should
see any being violate the Five Precepts, the Eight Precepts, the Ten Precepts,
other prohibitions, or commit any of the Seven Cardinal Sins or any offense
which leads to the Eight
Adversities -- any violations of the precepts whatever -- he should counsel
the offender to repent and reform. (46)
Hence, if a Bodhisattva does not
do so and furthermore continues to live together in the assembly with the
offender, share in the offerings of the laity, participate in the same Uposatha ceremony (47) and recite the
precepts -- while failing to bring up that person's offense, enjoining him to
repent -- the disciple commits a secondary offense.
If an Elder Master, a Mahayana
monk or fellow cultivator of like views and practice should come from far away
to the temple, residence, city or village of a disciple of the Buddha, the
disciple should respectfully welcome him and see him off. He should minister to
his needs at all times, though doing so may cost as much as three taels of gold!
Moreover, the disciple of the Buddha should respectfully request the
guest-master to preach the Dharma three times a day by bowing to him without a
single thought of resentment or weariness. (48) He should be
willing to sacrifice himself for the Dharma and never be lax in requesting
it.
If he does not act in this manner,
he commits a secondary offense.
A Bodhisattva disciple who is new
to the Order should take copies of the appropriate sutras or precept codes to
any place where such sutras, commentaries, or moral codes are being explained,
to listen, study, and inquire about the Dharma. He should go anywhere, be it in
a house, beneath a tree, in a temple, in the forests or mountains, or elsewhere.
If he fails to do so, he commits a secondary offense. (49)
If a disciple of the Buddha
disavows the eternal Mahayana sutras and moral codes, declaring that they were
not actually taught by the Buddha, and instead follows and observes those of the
Two Vehicles and deluded externalists, he commits a secondary offense. (50)
If a disciple of the Buddha should
see anyone who is sick, he should wholeheartedly provide for that person's needs
just as he would for a Buddha. Of the eight Fields of Blessings, looking
after the sick is the most important. A Buddha's disciple should take care of
his father, mother, Dharma teacher or disciple -- regardless of whether the
latter are disabled or suffering from various kinds of diseases. (51)
If instead, he becomes angry and
resentful and fails to do so, or refuses to rescue the sick or disabled in
temples, cities and towns, forests and mountains, or along the road, he commits
a secondary offense.
(52)
A disciple of the Buddha should
not store weapons such as knives, clubs, bows, arrows, spears, axes or any other
weapons, nor may he keep nets, traps or any such devices used in destroying
life.
(53)
As a disciple of the Buddha, he
must not even avenge the death of his parents -- let alone kill sentient
beings! (54)
He should not store any weapons or devices that can be used to kill sentient
beings. If he deliberately does so, he commits a secondary offense.
The first ten secondary precepts
have just been described. Disciples of the Buddha should study and respectfully
observe them. They are explained in detail in the six chapters [now lost]
following these precepts.
A disciple of the Buddha shall
not, out of personal benefit or evil intentions, act as a country's emissary to
foster military confrontation and war causing the slaughter of countless
sentient beings. As a disciple of the Buddha, he should not be involved in
military affairs, or serve as a courier between armies, much less act as a
willing catalyst for war. If he deliberately does so, he commits a secondary
offense.
(55)
A disciple of the Buddha must not
deliberately trade in slaves or sell anyone into servitude, nor should he trade
in domestic animals, coffins or wood for caskets. He cannot engage in these
types of business himself much less encourage others to do so. Otherwise, he
commits a secondary offense. (56)
A disciple of the Buddha must not,
without cause and with evil intentions, slander virtuous people, such as
Elder Masters, monks or nuns, kings, princes or other upright persons, saying
that they have committed the Seven Cardinal Sins or broken the Ten Major
Bodhisattva Precepts. He should be compassionate and filial and treat all
virtuous people as if they were his father, mother, siblings or other close
relatives. If instead, he slanders and harms them, he commits a secondary
offense.
(57)
A disciple of the Buddha shall
not, out of evil intentions, start wildfires to clear forests and burn
vegetation on mountains and plains, during the fourth to the ninth months of the
lunar year. Such fires [are particularly injurious to animals during that period
and may spread] to people's homes, towns and villages, temples and monasteries,
fields and groves, as well as the [unseen] dwellings and possessions of deities
and ghosts. He must not intentionally set fire to any place where there is life.
If he deliberately does so, he commits a secondary offense. (58)
A disciple of the Buddha must
teach one and all, from fellow disciples, relatives and spiritual friends, to
externalists and evil beings, how to receive and observe the Mahayana sutras and
moral codes. He should teach the Mahayana principles to them and help them
develop the Bodhi Mind -- as well as the Ten Dwellings, the Ten Practices and
the Ten Dedications, explaining the order and function of each of these Thirty
Minds (levels).
If instead, the disciple, with
evil, hateful intentions, perversely teaches them the sutras and moral codes of
the Two Vehicle tradition as well as the commentaries of deluded externalists,
he thereby commits a secondary offense. (59)
A Bodhisattva Dharma Master must
first, with a wholesome mind, study the rules of deportment, as well as
sutras and moral codes of the Mahayana tradition, and understand their meanings
in depth. Then, whenever novices come from afar to seek instruction, he should
explain, according to the Dharma, all the Bodhisattva renunciation practices,
such as burning one's body, arm, or finger [as the ultimate act in the quest for
Supreme Enlightenment]. If a novice is not prepared to follow these practices as
an offering to the Buddhas, he is not a Bodhisattva monk. Moreover, a
Bodhisattva monk should be willing to sacrifice his body and limbs for starving
beasts and hungry ghosts [as the ultimate act of compassion in rescuing sentient
beings].
(60)
After these explanations, the
Bodhisattva Dharma Master should teach the novices in an orderly way, to awaken
their minds. If instead, for personal gain, he refuses to teach or teaches in a
confused manner, quoting passages out of order and context, or teaches in a
manner that disparages the Triple Jewel, he commits a secondary offense.
A disciple of the Buddha must not,
for the sake of food, drink, money, possessions or fame, approach and befriend
kings, princes, or high officials and [on the strength of such relationships],
exact money, goods or other advantages. Nor may he encourage others to do so.
These actions are called untoward, excessive demands and lack compassion and
filial piety. Such a disciple commits a secondary offense. (61)
A disciple of the Buddha should
study the Twelve Divisions
of the Dharma and recite the Bodhisattva precepts frequently. He should
strictly observe these precepts in the Six Periods of the day and night and
fully understand their meaning and principles as well as the essence of their
Buddha Nature.
(62)
If instead, the disciple of the
Buddha fails to understand even a sentence or a verse of the moral code or the
causes and conditions related to the precepts, but pretends to understand them,
he is deceiving both himself and others. A disciple who understands nothing of
the Dharma, yet acts as a teacher transmitting the precepts, commits a secondary
offense.
A disciple of the Buddha must not,
with malicious intent gossip or spread rumors and slander, create discord and
disdain for virtuous people. [An example is] disparaging a monk who observes the
Bodhisattva precepts, as he [makes offerings to the Buddhas by] holding an
incense burner to his forehead. (63) A disciple of
the Buddha who does so commits a secondary offense.
A disciple of the Buddha should
have a mind of compassion and cultivate the practice of liberating sentient
beings. He must reflect thus: throughout the eons of time, all male sentient
beings have been my father, all female sentient beings my mother. I was born
of them.
(64) If I now slaughter them, I would be slaughtering my parents as
well as eating flesh that was once my own. This is so because all
elemental earth, water, fire and air -- the four constituents of all life --
have previously been part of my body, part of my substance. I must therefore
always cultivate the practice of liberating sentient beings and enjoin others to
do likewise -- as sentient beings are forever reborn, again and again, lifetime
after lifetime. If a Bodhisattva sees an animal on the verge of being killed, he
must devise a way to rescue and protect it, helping it to escape
suffering and death. The disciple should always teach the Bodhisattva precepts
to rescue and deliver sentient beings. (65)
On the day his father, mother, and
siblings die, he should invite Dharma Masters to explain the Bodhisattva sutras
and precepts. This will generate merits and virtues and help the deceased either
to achieve rebirth in the Pure Lands and meet the Buddhas or to secure rebirth
in the human or celestial realms. (66) If instead, a
disciple fails to do so, he commits a secondary offense.
You should study and respectfully
observe the above ten precepts. Each of them is explained in detail in the
chapter "Expiating Offenses."
A disciple of the Buddha must not
return anger for anger, blow for blow. He should not seek revenge, even if his
father, mother, siblings, or close relatives are killed -- nor should he do so
if the ruler or king of his country is murdered. To take the life of one being
in order to avenge the killing of another is contrary to filial piety [as we are
all related through the eons of birth and rebirth]. (67)
Furthermore, he should not keep
others in servitude, much less beat or abuse them, creating evil karma of mind,
speech and body day after day -- particularly the offenses of speech. How much
less should he deliberately commit the Seven Cardinal Sins. Therefore, if a
Bodhisattva-monk lacks compassion and deliberately seeks revenge, even for an
injustice done to his close relatives, he commits a secondary offense.
A disciple of the Buddha who has
only recently left home and is still a novice in the Dharma should not be
conceited. He must not refuse instruction on the sutras and moral codes from
Dharma Masters on account of his own intelligence, worldly learning, high
position, advanced age, noble lineage, vast understanding, great merits,
extensive wealth and possessions, etc. Although these Masters may be of humble
birth, young in age, poor, or suffering physical disabilities, they may still
have genuine virtue and deep understanding of sutras and moral codes.
The novice Bodhisattva should not
judge Dharma Masters on the basis of their family background and refuse to seek
instructions on the Mahayana truths from them. If he does so, he commits a
secondary offense.
(68)
After my passing, if a disciple
should, with a wholesome mind, wish to receive the Bodhisattva precepts, he may
make a vow to do so before the images of Buddhas and Bodhisattvas and practice
repentance before these images for seven days. If he then experiences a vision,
he has received the precepts. If he does not, he should continue doing so for
fourteen days, twenty-one days, or even a whole year, seeking to witness an
auspicious sign. After witnessing such a sign, he could, in front of images of
Buddhas and Bodhisattvas, formally receive the precepts. If he has not witnessed
such a sign, although he may have accepted the precepts before the Buddha
images, he has not actually received the precepts.
However, the witnessing of
auspicious signs is not necessary if the disciple receives the precepts directly
from a Dharma Master who has himself received the precepts. Why is this so? It
is because this is a case of transmission from Master to Master and therefore
all that is required is a mind of utter sincerity and respect on the part of the
disciple.
If, within a radius of some three
hundred fifty miles, a disciple cannot find a Master capable of conferring the
Bodhisattva precepts, he may seek to receive them in front of Buddha or
Bodhisattva images. However, he must witness an auspicious sign.
If a Dharma Master, on account of
his extensive knowledge of sutras and Mahayana moral codes as well as his close
relationship with kings, princes, and high officials, refuses to give
appropriate answers to student-Bodhisattvas seeking the meaning of sutras and
moral codes, or does so grudgingly, with resentment and arrogance, he commits a
secondary offense.
If a disciple of the Buddha fails
to study Mahayana sutras and moral codes assiduously and cultivate correct
views, correct nature and the correct Dharma Body, it is like abandoning the Seven Precious Jewels for
[mere stones]: worldly texts and the Two-Vehicle or externalist
commentaries.
(69) To do so is to create the causes and conditions that obstruct the
Path to Enlightenment and cut himself off from his Buddha Nature. It is a
failure to follow the Bodhisattva path. If a disciple intentionally acts in such
a manner, he commits a secondary offense.
After my passing, if a disciple
should serve as an abbot, elder Dharma Master, Precept Master, Meditation
Master, or Guest Prefect, he must develop a compassionate mind and peacefully
settle differences within the Assembly -- skillfully administering the resources
of the Three Jewels, spending frugally and not treating them as his own
property.
(70) If instead, he were to create disorder, provoke quarrels and
disputes or squander the resources of the Assembly, he would commit a secondary
offense.
Once a disciple of the Buddha has
settled down in a temple, if visiting Bodhisattva Bhiksus should arrive at the
temple precincts, the guest quarters established by the king, or even the summer
retreat quarters, or the quarters of the Great Assembly, the disciple should
welcome the visiting monks and see them off. He should provide them with such
essentials as food and drink, a place to live, beds, chairs, and the like. If
the host does not have the necessary means, he should be willing to pawn himself
or cut off and sell his own flesh. (71)
Whenever there are meal offerings
and ceremonies at a layman's home, visiting monks should be given a fair share
of the offerings. The abbot should send the monks, whether residents or guests,
to the donor's place in turn [according to their sacerdotal age or merits and
virtues].
(72) If only resident monks are allowed to accept invitations and not
visiting monks, the abbot is committing a grievous offense and is behaving no
differently than an animal. He is unworthy of being a monk or a son of the
Buddha, and is guilty of a secondary offense.
A disciple of the Buddha must not
accept personal invitations nor appropriate the offerings for himself. Such
offerings rightly belong to the Sangha -- the whole community of monks and nuns
of the Ten Directions. To accept personal offerings is to steal the possessions
of the Sangha of the Ten Directions. It is tantamount to stealing what belongs
to the Eight Fields of Blessings: Buddhas, Sages, Dharma Masters, Precept
Masters, monks/nuns, mothers, fathers, the sick. Such a disciple commits a
secondary offense.
(73)
A disciple of the Buddha, be he a
Bodhisattva monk, lay Bodhisattva, or other donor, should, when inviting monks
or nuns to conduct a prayer session, come to the temple and inform the monk in
charge. The monk will then tell him: "Inviting members of the Sangha according
to the proper order is tantamount to inviting the Arhats of the Ten
Directions. To offer a discriminatory special invitation to [such a worthy group
as] five hundred Arhats or Bodhisattva-monks will not generate as much merit as
inviting one ordinary monk, if it is his turn." (74)
There is no provision in the
teachings of the Seven Buddhas (75) for
discriminatory invitations. To do so is to follow externalist practices and to
contradict filial piety [toward all sentient beings]. If a disciple deliberately
issues a discriminatory invitation, he commits a secondary offense.
A disciple of the Buddha should
not, for the sake of gain or with evil intentions, engage in the business of
prostitution, selling the wiles and charms of men and women. (76) He must also
not cook for himself, milling and pounding grain. Neither may he act as a
fortune-teller predicting the gender of children, reading dreams and the like.
Nor shall he practice sorcery, work as a trainer of falcons or hunting dogs, nor
make a living concocting hundreds and thousands of poisons from deadly snakes,
insects, or from gold and silver. Such occupations lack mercy, compassion, and
filial piety [toward sentient beings]. Therefore, if a Bodhisattva intentionally
engages in these occupations, he commits a secondary offense.
A disciple of the Buddha must not,
with evil intentions, slander the Triple Jewel while pretending to be their
close adherent -- preaching the Truth of Emptiness while his actions are in the realm of
Existence. Furthermore, he must not handle worldly affairs for the laity, acting
as a go-between or matchmaker (77) -- creating the
karma of attachment. Moreover, during the six days of fasting each month and the
three months of fasting each year, (78) a disciple
should strictly observe all precepts, particularly against killing, stealing and
the rules against breaking the fast. Otherwise, the disciple commits a secondary
offense.
(79)
A Bodhisattva should respectfully
study and observe the ten preceding precepts. They are explained in detail in
the Chapter on "Prohibitions". (80)
After my passing, in the evil
periods that will follow, there will be externalists, evil persons, thieves and
robbers who steal and sell statues and paintings of Buddhas, Bodhisattvas and
[those to whom respect is due such as] their parents. They may even peddle
copies of sutras and moral codes, or sell monks, nuns or those who follow the
Bodhisattva Path or have developed the Bodhi Mind to serve as retainers or
servants to officials and others. (81)
A disciple of the Buddha, upon
witnessing such pitiful events, must develop a mind of compassion and find ways
to rescue and protect all persons and valuables, raising funds wherever he can
for this purpose. If a Bodhisattva does not act in this manner, he commits a
secondary offense.
A disciple of the Buddha must not
sell knives, clubs, bows, arrows, other life-taking devices, nor keep altered
scales or measuring devices. He should not abuse his governmental position to
confiscate people's possessions, nor should he, with malice at heart, restrain
or imprison others or sabotage their success. (82) In addition, he
should not raise cats, dogs, foxes, pigs and other such animals. (83) If he
intentionally does such things, he commits a secondary offense.
A disciple of the Buddha must not,
with evil intentions, watch people fighting or the battling of armies,
rebels, gangs and the like. (84) He should not
listen to the sounds of conch shells, drums, horns, guitars, flutes, lutes,
songs or other music, nor should he be party to any form of gambling, whether
dice, checkers, or the like. (85) Furthermore, he
should not practice fortune-telling or divination nor should he be an accomplice
to thieves and bandits. He must not participate in any of these activities. If
instead, he intentionally does so, he commits a secondary offense.
A disciple of the Buddha should
observe the Bodhisattva precepts every day, whether walking, standing, reclining
or seated -- reading and reciting them day and night. He should be resolute in
keeping the precepts, as strong as a diamond, as desperate as a shipwrecked
person clinging to a small log while attempting to cross the ocean, or as
principled as the "Bhiksu bound by reeds". (86) Furthermore, he
should always have a wholesome faith in the teachings of the Mahayana. Conscious
that sentient beings are Buddhas-to-be while the Buddhas are realized Buddhas,
he should develop the Bodhi Mind and maintain it in each and every thought,
without retrogression.
(87)
If a Bodhisattva has but a single
thought in the direction of the Two Vehicles or externalist teachings, he
commits a secondary offense. (88)
A Bodhisattva must make many great
vows -- to be filial to his parents and Dharma teachers, to meet good spiritual
advisors,
(89) friends, and colleagues who will keep teaching him the Mahayana
sutras and moral codes as well as the Stages of Bodhisattva
Practice (the Ten Dwellings, the Ten Practices, the Ten Dedications, and the
Ten Grounds). He should further vow to understand these teachings clearly so
that he can practice according to the Dharma while resolutely keeping the
precepts of the Buddhas. If necessary, he should lay down his life rather than
abandon this resolve for even a single moment. If a Bodhisattva does not make
such vows, he commits a secondary offense.
Once a Bodhisattva has made these
Great Vows, he should strictly keep the precepts of the Buddhas and make the
following resolutions:
1.- I would rather jump into a
raging blaze, a deep abyss, or into a mountain of knives, than engage in impure
actions with any woman, thus violating the sutras and moral codes of the Buddhas
of the Three Periods of Time.
2.- I would rather wrap myself a
thousand times with a red-hot iron net, than let this body, should it break the
precepts, wear clothing provided by the faithful.
I would rather swallow red hot
iron pellets and drink molten iron for hundreds of thousands of eons, than let
this mouth, should it break the precepts, consume food and drink provided by the
faithful.
I would rather lie on a bonfire or
a burning iron net than let this body, should it break the precepts, rest on
bedding, blankets and mats supplied by the faithful.
I would rather be impaled for eons
by hundreds of spears, than let this body, should it break the precepts, receive
medications from the faithful.
I would rather jump into a
cauldron of boiling oil and roast for hundreds of thousands of eons, than let
this body, should it break the precepts, receive shelter, groves, gardens, or
fields from the faithful.
3.- I would rather be pulverized
from head to toe by an iron sledge hammer, than let this body, should it break
the precepts, accept respect and reverence from the faithful. (90)
4.- I would rather have both eyes
blinded by hundreds of thousands of swords and spears, rather than break the
precepts by looking at beautiful forms. [In the same vein, I shall keep my mind
from being sullied by exquisite sounds, fragrances, food and
sensations.]
5.- I further vow that all
sentient beings will achieve Buddhahood. (91)
If a disciple of the Buddha does
not make the preceding great resolutions, he commits a secondary offense.
[As a cleric], a disciple of the
Buddha should engage in ascetic practices twice
each year. He should sit in meditation, winter and summer, and observe the
summer retreat. During those periods, he should always carry eighteen essentials
such as a willow branch (for a toothbrush), ash-water (for soap), the
traditional three clerical robes, an incense burner, a begging bowl, a sitting
mat, a water filter, bedding, copies of sutras and moral codes as well as
statues of Buddhas and Bodhisattvas.
When practicing austerities and
when traveling, be it for thirty miles or three hundred miles, a cleric should
always have the eighteen essentials with him. The two periods of austerities are
from the 15th of the first lunar month to the 15th of the third month, and from
the 15th of the eighth lunar month to the 15th of the tenth month. During the
periods of austerities, he requires these eighteen essentials just as a bird
needs its two wings.
Twice each month, the novice
Bodhisattva should attend the Uposattha ceremony and recite the Ten Major and
Forty-eight Secondary Precepts. Such recitations should be done before images of
the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas. If only one person attends the ceremony, then he
should do the reciting. If two, three, or even hundreds of thousands attend the
ceremony, still only one person should recite. Everyone else should listen in
silence. The one reciting should sit on a higher level than the audience, and
everyone should be dressed in clerical robes. During the summer retreat, each
and every activity should be managed in accordance with the Dharma.
When practicing the austerities,
the Buddhist disciple should avoid dangerous areas, unstable kingdoms, countries
ruled by evil kings, precipitous terrains, remote wildernesses, regions
inhabited by bandits, thieves, or lions, tigers, wolves, poisonous snakes, or
areas subject to hurricanes, floods and fires. The disciple should avoid all
such dangerous areas when practicing the austerities and also when observing the
summer retreat.
(92) Otherwise, he commits a secondary offense.
A disciple of the Buddha should
sit in the proper order when in the Assembly. Those who received the Bodhisattva
precepts first sit first, those who received the precepts afterwards should sit
behind. Whether old or young, a Bhiksu or Bhiksuni, a person of status, a king,
a prince, a eunuch, or a servant, etc., each should sit according to the order
in which he received the precepts. Disciples of the Buddha should not be like
externalists or deluded people who base their order on age or sit without any
order at all -- in barbarian fashion. In my Dharma, the order of sitting is
based on seniority of ordination.
Therefore, if a Bodhisattva does
not follow the order of sitting according to the Dharma, he commits a secondary
offense.
(93)
A disciple of the Buddha should
constantly counsel and teach all people to establish monasteries, temples and
pagodas in mountains and forests, gardens and fields. He should also construct
stupas for the Buddhas and buildings for winter and summer retreats. All
facilities required for the practice of the Dharma should be established.
Moreover, a disciple of the Buddha
should explain Mahayana sutras and the Bodhisattva precepts to all sentient
beings. In times of sickness, national calamities, impending warfare or upon the
death of one's parents, brothers and sisters, Dharma Masters and Precept
Masters, a Bodhisattva should lecture and explain Mahayana sutras and the
Bodhisattva precepts weekly for up to seven weeks. (94)
The disciple should read, recite,
and explain the Mahayana sutras and the Bodhisattva precepts in all prayer
gatherings, in his business undertakings and during periods of calamity -- fire,
flood, storms, ships lost at sea in turbulent waters or stalked by demons ... In
the same vein, he should do so in order to transcend evil karma, the Three Evil
Realms, the Eight Difficulties, the Seven Cardinal Sins, all forms of
imprisonment, or excessive sexual desire, anger, delusion, and illness. (95)
If a novice Bodhisattva fails to
act as indicated, he commits a secondary offense.
The Bodhisattva should study and
respectfully observe the nine precepts just mentioned above, as explained in the
"Brahma Altar" chapter.
A disciple of the Buddha should
not be selective and show preference in conferring the Bodhisattva precepts.
Each and every person can receive the precepts -- kings, princes, high
officials, Bhiksus, Bhiksunis, laymen, laywomen, libertines, prostitutes, the
gods in the eighteen Brahma Heavens or the six Desire Heavens, asexual persons,
bisexual persons, eunuchs, slaves, or demons and ghosts of all types. Buddhist
disciples should be instructed to wear robes and sleep on cloth of a neutral
color, formed by blending blue, yellow, red, black and purple dyes all
together.
The clothing of monks and nuns
should, in all countries, be different from those worn by ordinary
persons.
(96)
Before someone is allowed to
receive the Bodhisattva precepts, he should be asked: "have you committed any of
the Cardinal Sins?" The Precept Master should not allow those who have committed
such sins to receive the precepts.
Here are the Seven Cardinal Sins:
shedding the Buddha's blood, murdering an Arhat, killing one's father, killing
one's mother, murdering a Dharma Teacher, murdering a Precept Master or
disrupting the harmony of the Sangha.
Except for those who have
committed the Cardinal Sins, everyone can receive the Bodhisattva
precepts.
The Dharma rules of the Buddhist
Order prohibit monks and nuns from bowing down before rulers, parents,
relatives, demons and ghosts.
Anyone who understands the
explanations of the Precept Master can receive the Bodhisattva precepts.
Therefore, if a person were to come from thirty to three hundred miles away
seeking the Dharma and the Precept Master, out of meanness and anger, does not
promptly confer these precepts, he commits a secondary offense. (97)
If a disciple of the Buddha, when
teaching others and developing their faith in the Mahayana, should discover that
a particular person wishes to receive the Bodhisattva precepts, he should act as
a teaching master and instruct that person to seek out two Masters, a Dharma
Master and a Precept Master.
These two Masters should ask the
Precept candidate whether he has committed any of the Seven Cardinal Sins in
this life. If he has, he cannot receive the precepts. If not, he may receive the
precepts.
If he has broken any of the Ten
Major Precepts, he should be instructed to repent before the statues of
Buddhas and Bodhisattvas. He should do so six times a day and recite the Ten
Major and Forty-eight Minor Precepts, paying respect with utter sincerity to the
Buddhas of the Three Periods of Time. He should continue in this manner until he
receives an auspicious response, which could occur after seven days, fourteen
days, twenty-one days, or even a year. Examples of auspicious signs include:
experiencing the Buddhas rub the crown of one's head, or seeing lights, halos,
flowers and other such rare phenomena.
The witnessing of an auspicious
sign indicates that the candidate's karma has been dissipated. Otherwise,
although he has repented, it was of no avail. He still has not received the
precepts. However, the merits accrued will increase his chances of receiving the
precepts in a future lifetime.
Unlike the case of a major
Bodhisattva precept, if a candidate has violated any of the Forty-eight
Secondary Precepts, he can confess his infraction and sincerely repent before
Bodhisattva-monks or nuns. After that, his offense will be eradicated.
The officiating Master, however,
must fully understand the Mahayana sutras and moral codes, the secondary as well
as the major Bodhisattva precepts, what constitutes an offense and what does
not, the truth of Primary
Meaning, as well as the various Bodhisattva cultivation stages -- the Ten
Dwellings, the Ten Practices, the Ten Dedications, the Ten Grounds, and Equal
and Wonderful Enlightenment.
He should also know the type and
degree of contemplation required for entering and exiting these stages and be
familiar with the Ten Limbs of Enlightenment as well as a variety of other
contemplations.
If he is not familiar with the
above and, out of greed for fame, disciples or offerings, he makes a pretense of
understanding the sutras and moral codes, he is deceiving himself as well as
others. Hence, if he intentionally acts as Precept Master, transmitting the
precepts to others, he commits a secondary offense.
A disciple of the Buddha should
not, with a greedy motive, expound the great precepts of the Buddhas
before those who have not received them, externalists or persons with heterodox
views. Except in the case of kings or supreme rulers, he may not expound the
precepts before any such person.
Persons who hold heterodox views
and do not accept the precepts of the Buddhas are untamed in nature. They will
not, lifetime after lifetime, encounter the Triple Jewel. They are as mindless
as trees and stones; they are no different from wooden stumps. Hence, if a
disciple of the Buddha expounds the precepts of the Seven Buddhas before such
persons, he commits a secondary offense. (98)
If a disciple of the Buddha joins
the Order out of pure faith, receives the correct precepts of the Buddhas, but
then develops thoughts of violating the precepts, he is unworthy of receiving
any offerings from the faithful, unworthy of walking on the ground of his
motherland, unworthy of drinking its water.
Five thousand guardian spirits
constantly block his way, calling him "Evil thief!" These spirits always follow
him into people's homes, villages and towns, sweeping away his very footprints.
Everyone curses such a disciple, calling him a "Thief within the Dharma." All
sentient beings avert their eyes, not wishing to see him.
A disciple of the Buddha who
breaks the precepts is no different from an animal or a wooden stump. Hence, if
a disciple intentionally violates the correct precepts, he commits a secondary
offense.
(99)
A disciple of the Buddha should
always singlemindedly receive, observe, read and recite the Mahayana sutras and
moral codes. He should copy the sutras and moral codes onto bark, paper, fine
cloth, or bamboo slats and not hesitate to use his own skin as paper, draw his
own blood for ink and his marrow for ink solvent, or split his bones for use as
pens. (100)
He should use precious gems, priceless incense and flowers and other precious
things to make and adorn covers and cases to store the sutras and codes.
Hence, if he does not make
offerings to the sutras and moral codes, in accordance with the Dharma, he
commits a secondary offense.
A disciple of the Buddha should
develop a mind of Great Compassion. Whenever he enters people's homes, villages,
cities or towns, and sees sentient beings, he should say aloud, "You sentient
beings should all take the Three Refuges and receive the Ten [Major Bodhisattva]
Precepts." Should he come across cows, pigs, horses, sheep and other kinds of
animals, he should concentrate and say aloud, "You are now animals; you should
develop the Bodhi Mind." A Bodhisattva, wherever he goes, be it climbing a
mountain, entering a forest, crossing a river, or walking through a field should
help all sentient beings develop the Bodhi Mind. (101)
If a disciple of the Buddha does
not wholeheartedly teach and rescue sentient beings in such a manner, he commits
a secondary offense.
A disciple of the Buddha should
always have a mind of Great Compassion to teach and transform sentient beings.
Whether visiting wealthy and aristocratic donors or addressing Dharma
gatherings, he should not remain standing while explaining the Dharma to laymen,
but should occupy a raised seat in front of the lay assembly. (102)
A Bhiksu serving as Dharma
instructor must not be standing while lecturing to the Fourfold Assembly. During
such lectures, the Dharma Master should sit on a raised seat amidst flowers and
incense, while the Fourfold Assembly must listen from lower seats. The Assembly
must respect and follow the Master like filial sons obeying their parents or
Brahmans worshipping fire. If a Dharma Master does not follow these rules while
preaching the Dharma, he commits a secondary offense.
A disciple of the Buddha who has
accepted the precepts of the Buddhas with a faithful mind, must not use his high
official position (as a king, prince, official, etc.) to undermine the moral
code of the Buddhas. He may not establish rules and regulations preventing the
four kinds of lay disciples from joining the Order and practicing the Way, nor
may he prohibit the making of Buddha or Bodhisattva images, statues and stupas,
or the printing and distribution of sutras and codes. (103) Likewise, he
must not establish rules and regulations placing controls on the Fourfold
Assembly. If highly placed lay disciples engage in actions contrary to the
Dharma, they are no different from vassals in the service of [illegitimate]
rulers.
A Bodhisattva should rightfully
receive respect and offerings from all. If instead, he is forced to defer to
officials, this is contrary to the Dharma, contrary to the moral code.
Hence, if a king or official has
received the Bodhisattva precepts with a wholesome mind, he should avoid
offenses that harm the Three Jewels. If instead, he intentionally commits such
acts, he is guilty of a secondary offense. (104)
A disciple of the Buddha who
becomes a monk with wholesome intentions must not, for fame or profit, explain
the precepts to kings or officials in such a way as to cause monks, nuns or
laymen who have received the Bodhisattva precepts to be tied up, thrown into
prison or forcefully conscripted. If a Bodhisattva acts in such a manner, he is
no different from a worm in a lion's body, eating away at the lion's flesh. This
is not something a worm living outside the lion can do. Likewise, only disciples
of the Buddhas can bring down the Dharma -- no externalist or demon can do
so.
(105)
Those who have received the
precepts of the Buddha should protect and observe them just as a mother would
care for her only child or a filial son his parents. They must not break the
precepts.
If a Bodhisattva hears
externalists or evil-minded persons speak ill of, or disparage, the precepts of
the Buddhas, he should feel as though his heart were pierced by three hundred
spears, or his body stabbed with a thousand knives or thrashed with a thousand
clubs. He would rather suffer in the hells himself for a hundred eons than hear
evil beings disparage the precepts of the Buddha. How much worse it would be if
the disciple were to break the precepts himself or incite others to do so! This
is indeed an unfilial mind! Hence, if he violates the precepts intentionally, he
commits a secondary offense.
The preceding nine precepts should
be studied and respectfully observed with utmost faith.
The Buddha said, "All of you
disciples! These are the Forty-eight Secondary Precepts that you should observe.
Bodhisattvas of the past have recited them, those of the future will
recite them, those of the present are now reciting them.
"Disciples of the Buddha! You
should all listen! These Ten Major and Forty-eight Secondary Precepts are
recited by all Buddhas of the Three Periods of Time -- past, present, and
future. I now recite them as well."
The Buddha continued: "Everyone in
the Assembly -- kings, princes, officials, Bhiksus, Bhiksunis, laymen, laywomen
and those who have received the Bodhisattva precepts -- should receive and
observe, read and recite, explain and copy these precepts of the eternal Buddha
Nature so that they can circulate without interruption for the edification of
all sentient beings. They will then encounter the Buddhas and receive the
teachings from each one in succession. Lifetime after lifetime, they will escape
the Three Evil Paths and the Eight Difficulties and will always be reborn in the
human and celestial realms."
I have concluded a general
explanation of the precepts of the Buddhas beneath this Bodhi Tree. All in this
Assembly should singlemindedly study the Pratimoksa precepts and joyfully
observe them.
These precepts are explained in
detail in the exhortation section of the "Markless Celestial King"
chapter.
At that time, the Bodhisattvas of
the Three Thousand World System (cosmos) sat listening with utmost reverence to
the Buddha reciting the precepts. They then joyously received and observed
them.
As Buddha Sakyamuni finished
explaining the Ten Inexhaustible Precepts of the "Mind-Ground Dharma Door"
chapter, (which Vairocana Buddha had previously proclaimed in the Lotus Flower
Treasury World), countless other Sakyamuni Buddhas did the same.
As Sakyamuni Buddha preached in
ten different places, from the Mahesvara Heaven Palace to the Bodhi Tree, for
the benefit of countless Bodhisattvas and other beings, all the countless
Buddhas in the infinite lands of the Lotus Treasury World did the same.
They explained the Buddha's Mind
Treasury (the Thirty Minds), Ground Treasury, Precept Treasury, Infinite Actions
and Vows Treasury, the Treasury of the Ever-Present Buddha Nature as Cause and
Effect of Buddhahood. Thus, all the Buddhas completed their expositions of the
countless Dharma Treasuries.
All sentient beings throughout the
billions of worlds gladly receive and observe these Teachings.
The characteristics of the
Mind-Ground are explained in greater detail in the chapter "Seven Forms of
Conduct of the Buddha Floral Brilliance King."
The sages with great samadhi and
wisdom
Can observe this teaching;
Even before reaching
Buddhahood
They are blessed with five
benefits:
First, the Buddhas of the Ten
Directions
Always keep them in mind and
protect them.
Secondly, at the time of
death
They hold correct views with a
joyous mind.
Third, wherever they are
reborn,
The Bodhisattvas are their
friends.
(106)
Fourth, merits and virtues abound
as
The Paramita of Precepts is (107)
accomplished.
Fifth, in this life and in
succeeding ones,
Observing all precepts, they are
filled with Wise people should ponder this
well.
Common beings clinging to marks
and self
Cannot obtain this
teaching.
Nor can followers of the Two
Vehicles, To nurture the sprouts of
Bodhi,
To illuminate the world with
wisdom,
You should carefully
observe
The True Mark of all
dharmas:
(108)
Neither born nor unborn,
Neither eternal nor
extinct,
Neither the same nor
different,
Neither coming nor going.
In that singleminded state
The disciple should diligently
cultivate
And adorn the Bodhisattva's
practices and deeds
In sequential order.
Between the teachings of study and
non-study,
One should not develop thoughts of
discrimination.
This is the Foremost Path
--
Also known as Mahayana.
All offenses of idle speculation
and meaningless debate
(109)
Invariably disappear at this
juncture;
The Buddha's omniscient
wisdom
Also arises from this.
Therefore, all disciples of the
Buddha
Should develop great
resolve,
And strictly observe the Buddha's
precepts
As though they were brilliant
gems.
All Bodhisattvas of the
past
Have studied these
precepts;
Those of the future will also
study them.
Those of the present study them as
well.
This is the path walked by the
Buddhas,
And praised by the Buddhas.
I have now finished explaining the
precepts,
The body of immense merit and
virtue.
I now transfer them all to
sentient beings;
May they all attain Supreme
Wisdom;
May the sentient beings who hear
this Dharma
All attain Buddhahood.
In the Lotus Treasury
World,
Vairocana explained an
infinitesimal part of the Mind-Ground Door,
Transmitting it to the
Sakyamunis:
(110)
Major and minor precepts are
clearly delineated,
All sentient beings receive
immense benefits.
END OF SUTRA All celestials, titans and
spirits
Who have come to hear the
Dharma,
Should earnestly uphold it, that
it may remain forever,
And everyone may practice it with
diligence.
All who have come here to
listen,
Whether of this earth or
beyond,
Should rely on the True Dharma,
practicing We wish that the world may be
forever calm and peaceful,
And that the infinite wisdom of
the Dharma always benefit sentient beings.
May all their transgressions be
erased,
May they escape suffering and
enter Nirvana.
May the precepts always perfume
their bodies,
May samadhi always clothe their
forms.
May the flowers of wisdom adorn
all lands,
May all realms always be peaceful
and serene.
Homage to the Dharma-protecting
Bodhisattvas- Mahasattvas (3 times)
(At this point, the reciter of
the precepts arises and, with palms joined, announces: "As instructed, I [name]
have just finished reciting the precepts. If, because of my laxity in guarding
the three karma of body speech and mind, there were errors or omissions, I
humbly request the indulgence of the assembly.")
Oh, Sariputra,
form does not differ from emptiness, and emptiness
does not differ from form. Form is emptiness and emptiness is form; the same is
true for feelings, perceptions, impulses and consciousness.
Oh, Sariputra,
the characteristics of emptiness of all dharmas are non-arising, non-ceasing,
non-defiled, non-pure, non-increasing, non-decreasing.
Therefore, in
emptiness there are no forms, no feelings, perceptions, impulses or
consciousness; no eye, ear, nose, tongue, body or mind; no form, sound, smell,
taste, touch or phenomena; no realm of the eye and so forth, up to no realm of
consciousness; no ignorance and no ending of ignorance, and so forth, up to no
old age and death and no ending of old age and death. There is also no
suffering, or cause of suffering, or cessation of suffering, and no Path. There
is no wisdom and there is no attainment, because there is nothing to be
attained.
The Bodhisattvas,
relying on Prajna Paramita, have no obstruction in their minds. Because there is
no obstruction, there is no fear, and they transcend confusion and deluded
views, ultimately reaching Nirvana.
The Buddhas of
the past, present and future, relying on Prajna Paramita, attain Supreme
Enlightenment. Therefore, the Prajna Paramita is the great divine mantra, the
mantra of illumination, the supreme mantra, the unequalled mantra, which can
dispel all suffering -- truly and not falsely. She then uttered the Prajna
Paramita mantra, saying:
"Gate, Gate,
Paragate, Parasamgate, Bodhi Svaha." * (If time allows, the
practitioner can recite the Buddha's name and dedicate the merits, following the
general Pure Land liturgy;
alternatively, if time does not permit, the text below may be used.)
Listening to
these precepts is an act of supreme virtue;
I dedicate these
countless supreme virtues and merits to all sentient beings in the Dharma
Realm,
Vowing that they
may swiftly achieve rebirth
In the land of
the Buddha of Limitless Light.
I vow to
eradicate all obstructions and afflictions,
I vow to attain
Supreme Enlightenment,
I vow to
eradicate all delusive karma,
Thus will I
always follow the Bodhisattva Path.
I vow to be
reborn in the Western Pure
Land,
The Nine Lotus
Grades will be my parents;
When the blossoms
open, I will see Amitabha Buddha and awaken to the truth of Non-Birth,
Non-retrogressing
Bodhisattvas will be my friends.
*** To everyone
everywhere
So that all
sentient beings and I
Achieve
Buddhahood together.
I take refuge in
the Buddha, vowing that sentient beings may understand the Great Way and develop
the Supreme Mind;
I take refuge in
the Dharma, vowing that sentient beings may penetrate all the sutras with wisdom
as profound as the oceans;
I take refuge in
the Sangha, vowing that sentient beings be in harmony with the Great Assembly,
free of all obstructions.
Homage to the
great compassionate Bodhisattva Avalokitesvara, to the Bodhisattva Mahasthama
and to the Pure Assembly of Bodhisattvas, as vast as the oceans;
Homage to the
Pure Land Assembly, as vast as the oceans, of Buddhas, Bodhisattvas, superior
Bodhisattvas and Beings of the Highest Virtue. NOTES
* *
Assembly of
precept-holders,
Most
Virtuous Ones (orUpasaka/Upasika)!
The
day is done. Life dwindles with it.
For fish stranded in
shallow water, what joy is there?
(4)
Question: Is the
Sangha (5)
assembled? (by the
reciter).
Most
Virtuous Ones (or
Upasaka/Upasika)! Join your palms together and listen attentively! I am now
about to recite the preamble to the great precepts of the Buddhas. Most Virtuous
Ones! Be silent and attentive. In this assembly, those who are aware that they
have transgressed should repent. With repentance, peace of mind
is restored. Without repentance, your transgressions will become heavier. Those
who have not transgressed may remain silent. By your silence, I know that you
are pure (have kept the precepts).
SUTRA
China, Eastern
Chin dynasty, 5th c.
merits and
wisdom.
Such disciples are sons of the
Buddha.
abiding in
quietude,
Plant their seeds within
it.
* *
day and
night,
With compassion toward all
beings, always rescuing and protecting them.
When the Bodhisattva
Avalokitesvara was practicing the deep Prajna Paramita, she perceived that the
Five Skandhas were empty. Thus, she overcame all ills and suffering.
* *
I
dedicate these merits and virtues
Vows
May
Amitabha Buddha always come to protect me, helping to develop my good roots. May
I be diligent in this life and never lose the pure causes for rebirth in
Amitabha's Land. When I depart from this world, may my body and mind be in
correct concentration, with no impediments to my faculties of hearing and sight.
May Amitabha Buddha appear before me, with the Assembly of Bodhisattvas bearing
a lotus dais. In an instant, I shall be reborn in the Pure Land, perfect the
Bodhisattva Path and rescue all sentient beings. Together, may we all achieve
Supreme Wisdom.
Bowing with Utmost
Reverence
Homage
to the great merciful and compassionate Buddha Amitabha of the Western Land of
Ultimate Bliss;
(by Van Hien Study
Group,
based on commentaries of Elder Masters.)
1. Vairocana Buddha: The primordial Buddha. Represents the Dharma Body of Buddha Sakyamuni and all Buddhas. His Pure Land is the entire cosmos.
2. Wish-fulfilling gem: "A jewel said to possess the power of producing whatever one desires. It symbolizes the greatness and virtue of the Buddha and the Buddhist scriptures." (A Dictionary of Buddhist Terms and Concepts, p. 504-505)
3. Four months make a season: Traditionally, in Buddhism, following the Indian custom, the year is divided into three seasons: spring, summer and winter. There is no autumn.
Upasaka/Upasika: Laymen/Laywomen who have taken at least one of the five lay precepts; in the context of this sutra, members of the laity who have taken the Bodhisattva precepts.
4. These verses allude to the following story:
Three fish were stranded in shallow water. One returned to the sea by leaping over an obstacle in its path (a small boat). Another returned to the sea by swimming around the boat. The third fish just frolicked in the water, oblivious to its situation. In the end, when the water dried up, it suffocated to death.
5. Sangha: The Order of monks and nuns.
6. If a monk or nun who has taken the Bodhisattva precepts and kept them since the last service cannot attend the semi-monthly Uposatha, he should request a colleague to represent him and state that he is in agreement with the proceedings. Acceptable reasons for absence include Dharma work and illness.
7. Pratimoksa: A body of precepts; in this case, the 58 Bodhisattva precepts. The term also applies to the full body of Bhiksu/Bhiksuni precepts.
8. Uposatha:
Semi-monthly service for recitation of precepts, either the Bhiksu/Bhiksuni or
Bodhisattva precepts. According to the Vinaya, the recitation should be preceded
by a public confession of transgressions. In practice, this part of the service
is often omitted.
9. The Brahma Net Sutra was translated from a Sanskrit text. A Tibetan translation is also extant, confirming the Indian origin of the Sutra. Master Kumarajiva's translation bureau was reportedly composed of some three thousand monks.
The Brahma Net Sutra is "a two-fascicle sutra translated into Chinese in A.D. 406 by Kumarajiva of the Later Chin dynasty. According to the preface written by his disciple Seng-chao, this text corresponds to the tenth chapter of a much longer Sanskrit original consisting of 120 fascicles comprising sixty-one chapters. The first fascicle ... expounds forty stages of Bodhisattva practice ... The second sets forth ten major and forty-eight minor precepts. This sutra was highly valued in China, [Korea, Vietnam] and Japan as a work detailing precepts for Bodhisattvas, and many commentaries were written on it" (A Dictionary of Buddhist Terms and Concepts, p. 30).
Please note that the Mahayana Brahma Net Sutra, (and the Bodhisattva precepts contained therein), is a different text from the sutra of the same name found in the Digha Nikaya of the Pali (Theravada) canon. These Bodhisattva precepts are traditionally taken by Mahayana monks and nuns a few days (or sometimes immediately) after they take their precepts of ordination as a Bhiksu or Bhiksuni. The Bodhisattva precepts are also given on these occasions to advanced laymen and laywomen. Although the Brahma Net Sutra can be high in tone and demanding of practitioners, readers should not be scared away or discouraged. They should not, however, expect to grasp the full significance of the injunctions without developing the Bodhi Mind and engaging in serious practice.
The Sravaka
(monks' and nuns') precepts were established by the Buddha to correct problems
as they occurred. For example, during the alms rounds, young monks would receive
less food than older ones and so would sometimes go hungry. Therefore, the
Buddha established the rule that donations should be pooled and shared equally
among all monks. The Bodhisattva precepts, on the other hand, are based on
eternal truths inherent in the Self-Nature (e.g., the precepts on generosity).
Thus, while the Sravaka precepts are practical rules, the Bodhisattva precepts
are independent of time and space, but part and parcel of the Self-Nature -- the
Mind.
10. In Mahayana texts, the word "Sakyamuni" can be taken to mean a) a greatly compassionate being and b) an ascetic who has calmed his mind. In the cosmos, there is an infinite number of such sages -- an infinite number of Sakyamuni Buddhas.
Each time a
Buddha is about to teach the Mahayana Sutras, he first emits lights from various
parts of his body as an auspicious sign. This is to help members of the assembly
to develop faith and deep respect, thus becoming more receptive to the teachings
and receiving extra benefits. Emitting light is thus an act of compassion of the
Buddhas.
11. Seven years of
cultivation: this refers to the six years the future Sakyamuni Buddha
practiced alone (after discovering that the ascetic teachings he received
earlier were not leading to
Supreme Enlightenment), as
well as the forty-nine days he meditated under the Bodhi tree.
12. Jewelled Net (of
Indra): one of the most beautiful and profound metaphors in the Mahayana
tradition. It is associated with the Avatamsaka Sutra,
with its conception of unity and universal interdependence:
Far away in the heavenly abode of the great god Indra (Brahma), there is a wonderful net which has been hung by some cunning artificer in such a manner that it stretches out infinitely in all directions. In accordance with the extravagant tastes of deities, the artificer has hung a single glittering jewel in each "eye" of the net, and since the net itself is infinite in dimension, the jewels are infinite in number. There hang the jewels, glittering like stars of the first magnitude, a wonderful sight to behold. If we now arbitrarily select one of these jewels for inspection and look closely at it, we will discover that in its polished surface there are reflected all the other jewels in the net, infinite in number. Not only that, but each of the jewels reflected in this one jewel is also reflecting all the other jewels, so that there is an infinite reflecting process occurring.
The Hua-Yen [Avatamsaka] school has been fond of this image, mentioned many times in its literature, because it symbolizes a cosmos in which there is an infinitely repeated interrelationship among all the members of the cosmos. This relationship is said to be one of simultaneous mutual identity and mutual intercausality (Francis Cook, Hua-Yen Buddhism,p.2).13. I have come to this world 8,000 times. The Buddha has been among us countless times, in countless forms. He knows our world, and we can rely on His teachings (cf. Lotus Sutra).
14. Bodhisattva disciples
should transmit the Bodhisattva precepts to sentient beings. There is no such
requirement in any other set of precepts. See Introduction.
15. Important point: if we
truly believe that sentient beings are the Buddhas of the future, we would never
think of killing them, or harming them in any way. Rather, we would have
feelings of compassion toward all sentient beings, without exception. This sense
of compassion is the very essence of the
Bodhisattva precepts. Therefore, the Brahma Net Sutra
states: "If you should have such faith/ Then this precept code is
fulfilled."
16. Filial piety (filiality) toward one's parents means not only to avoid causing them pain, but also to strive to make them happy. To be filial, therefore, is to have compassion towards our parents.
Moreover, "parents" in the Mahayana context does not mean one's parents in this lifetime only but also throughout the eons of time. Through the eons of rebirth, all men and women must have been our fathers or mothers at one time or another. Thus, the word "parents" represents all sentient beings. (See, for example, the Filial Piety Sutra.)
In other words, to be
filial toward one's parents means to have compassion for all sentient beings.
Thus, if a person is truly filial to his parents, he is in
effect observing all the
Bodhisattva precepts. This is because all these precepts have but one goal
-- to nurture compassion for all sentient beings by showing them the way to
Enlightenment.
17. Ultimate Path: The
Path or Way to Buddhahood, not Arhatship (goal of the Two Vehicles or Theravada)
or the paths of gods and humans. For example, if one were to donate ten thousand
dollars to a temple, hoping to receive wealth in a future lifetime or to obtain
happiness, one would not be following the Ultimate Path. On the other hand,
transferring the merits one has accrued to all sentient beings so that they, as
well as ourselves,may achieve Buddhahood is the Ultimate Path.
18. Restraint and
Cessation: The basic or Sravaka precepts taught by the Buddhas (i.e., the
five lay precepts, the ten precepts of novice monks, or the 250 for Bhiksus) all
have an essentially negative tone. They are meant to prevent the practitioner
from committing offenses. The Bodhisattva precepts, on the other hand, shift the
emphasis toward the altruistic aspect: we should consider all sentient beings as
part of our family; we should be filial to them, have compassion for them. Thus
the Bodhisattva's precepts, unlike other precepts, have two components:
self-benefit and benefit to others, with the emphasis on
benefit to others.
19. There were 16 great
kingdoms in the Indian subcontinent at the time of the Buddha.
20. In other words, the
Bodhisattva precepts are above differentiations, above idle speculation -- above
human reasoning. Trying to understand the Bodhisattva precepts in their totality
with our limited mind is no different from viewing the heavens through a child's
telescope! It is for this reason that the editors have relied on the
commentaries of knowledgeable Dharma Masters in preparing these notes.
21. The Sravaka precepts (lay and Bhiksu/Bhiksuni precepts) are conferred only on able-bodied persons in full possession of their mental and physical capacities. This is because monks and nuns are the temporal representation of the Buddha on earth. Joining the Order is like being selected as officers in the army, the army of liberation.
In contrast, Bodhisattvas take the ideal of benefitting sentient beings as their only goal. Therefore, with a few specific exceptions, everyone can receive the precepts and everyone can study and put them into practice.Please note in this connection that for a Bodhisattva precept to be broken and either a Parajika (major) or secondary offense created, several factors must come into play: a) foundation, b) intention, c) action, d) result.
For example, in the case of the precept against killing: a) the object has to be a sentient being and the perpetrator aware of this fact; b) the aim must be to kill; c) an act of violence must be perpetrated; d) the victim must actually die. However, even if only one factor, intention (motivation) is involved, the Bodhisattva still incurs some negative karma for having violated part of the precept. (The importance of the mind is reflected in modern jurisprudence through the distinction between manslaughter, attempted murder, murder in the first and second degrees.)
Knowledge as
to when
and how a precept is
violated would remove some of the fear and reluctance that laypersons sometimes
have with regard to taking the precepts.
22. Before they receive the Bodhisattva precepts, sentient beings differ greatly in wisdom, status, wealth, and so forth. However, once they receive the precepts, they have joined the ranks of the Awakened, those "foremost in purity":
When sentient beings receive the Bodhisattva precepts ...23. Transformation beings: refers to certain types of sentient beings, such as gods or dragons, who can take the appearance of human beings for the purpose of, for example, attending sermons or receiving the precepts (as such opportunities are not necessarily available at all times in their respective realms). See also note 109.
At that time, they become "supreme vehicles of the Dharma", and are foremost in purity.
24. The mind is the key
factor in all Bodhisattva precepts. For example, Dr. J.J.M. de Groot, wrote the
following, with reference to Chinese Buddhist monks in the nineteenth
century:
Even when they are away from their temples, the monks strictly abstain from non-vegetarian food. In any case the temptation does not arise for them: after following a vegetarian diet for a year or two, they develop an invincible disgust for meat and fish. On several occasions, when the author of these lines has had the opportunity to take his meals [in one of the huts reserved for lay guests adjacent to the monastery where he was staying], he was visited by monks curious to see how and what he ate. However, as soon as they smelled the odor of his pork roast or his leg of lamb, they would dash out of the hut -- sick and ready to throw up (Le Code du Mahayana en Chine, p. 103).
Killing by
expedient means: refers to the means employed to facilitate the killing of a
sentient being, such as pointing out the whereabouts of a chicken to others,
cornering it, binding its feet, forcing its head onto the butcher block,
etc.
25. Parajika offense. A major offense, which warrants expulsion from the Buddhist Order. (In practice, the cleric is given the opportunity to repent and reform.)
Killing sentient beings, including slaughtering animals for food, is among the heaviest transgressions in Buddhism. This is not only because such acts create untold suffering but also because they cut short the lives of future Buddhas (as all sentient beings have a common Buddha Nature).The injunction against all forms of killing (including suicide), covering all sentient beings, is unique to Buddhism. Jainism, for example, approves of the penance of death by self-starvation, while Hindu ceremonies such as the Srauta rites
"center on offering into the altar fires oblations of milk, butter, honey ... domestic animals ..." (K. Crim,Dictionary of Religions, p. 369 and 790.)
Note: There are important exceptions to this rule. A well-known recent example is the self-immolation (suicide) of Master Thich Quang Duc in the early sixties to protest the persecution of Buddhists in Vietnam. The Master, a recognized and respected figure, killed himself not to escape personal suffering, but rather to call attention to the plight of the population at large, bring a halt to the persecutions and, in the good Mahayana tradition, save the perpetrators themselves from major transgressions.
The first Sravaka
precept (the precepts of Bhiksus/ Bhiksunis) is not to indulge in sexual
relations, while the first Bodhisattva precept is not to kill. This is because
the Sravakas' main goal is to become Arhats and escape Birth and Death.
Bodhisattvas, on the other hand, take compassion as their main calling,
and killing is the very antithesis of compassion. Another explanation is that
the Sravaka precepts are specific to an audience and time. Thus, in the time of
the Buddha, when a Bhiksu/Bhiksuni committed a certain offense, the Buddha, in
response, instituted a certain precept or regulation. This is how the first
Bhiksu/Bhiksuni precept against sexual relations came into being. Bodhisattva
precepts, on the other hand, are universal in scope, beyond time, space and
audience. They were promulgated independently of specific offenses, to help the
practitioner return to his Self-Nature and achieve Buddhahood -- they are the
precepts of the Mind.
26. The life of a sentient
being can be divided into two aspects: the internal, related to the physical
body, and the external, having to do with food, possessions, and the like. The
physical body is sustained by food and other essentials. If these essentials are
stolen, life becomes very difficult. In extreme cases, stealing them is
tantamount to taking a person's very life. Therefore, the precept 'not to steal'
is second in importance only to the precept 'not to kill.' Please note, too,
that in the "Four Means of Salvation," charity is first and foremost. These are
the four means by which Bodhisattvas interact with society in order to carry out
their work. Charity, the giving of one's possessions to benefit others, is the
antithesis of stealing. (Master Yen-p'ei)
Stealing by expedient
means: refers to such acts as hiding other people's possessions, etc. and
then adopting an air of innocence, feigning ignorance as to what
occurred.
27. According to the
commentaries, improper sexual behavior includes such actions as engaging in sex
at inappropriate times (in the daytime, on fasting or auspicious days) or in
inappropriate places (outside a couple's bedroom, for example).
28. Sexual relations with
any sentient being are strictly forbidden to monks and nuns. The purpose is to
sever attachments and cut off the very cause of Birth and Death (see Charles
Luk, tr., Surangama Sutra, p.
152 ff). See note 77 and
the following:
This precept is placed third, indicating that it is not as heavy as the precepts against killing and stealing. But if you seek to get out of the Triple Realm by cultivating the Way, then sexual conduct is a factor that obstructs you even more than killing or stealing. Sexual conduct is... called "conduct which is not Brahma-like," because Brahma means pure. It's not pristine, not pure. It's also called "impure conduct " because it is the very root of Birth and Death. It's the source of revolving on the wheel of rebirth. In the Surangama Sutra it says: "All living beings are sustained in their lives because of sexual desire." If they cut off sexual desire, they can transcend revolving in samsara; they can leap out of Birth and Death (Master Hsuan Hua).29. Examples of physical means include nodding, shaking one's head, etc. An instance of lying through mental means is when someone who has committed a misdeed remains silent when asked. The most serious example of false speech in Buddhism, constituting a major offense is to claim to have achieved a level of attainment (Arhatship, for example) when one has not in fact attained it. The purpose of such a claim is, of course, to receive respect and offerings. Other lies are considered secondary in importance.
30. Selling alcoholic
beverages is considered a major offense while consuming alcoholic beverages is
only a secondary one. (secondary precept No. 2). This is because Bodhisattvas
place compassion first and foremost and aim at benefitting others -- to sell
liquor is to harm others, to consume liquor is to harm only oneself. Why should
we not consume alcoholic beverages? Buddhism prohibits alcoholic beverages not
to deny enjoyment of life, but because alcohol clouds the mind and prevents
one's innate wisdom from emerging. Thus, to sell liquor goes against the
Bodhisattva's compassionate goal -- to help sentient beings develop wisdom and
achieve Buddhahood.
31. The Bodhisattva's aim is to benefit sentient beings. Therefore, when someone commits an offense, the Bodhisattva does not advertise it but patiently finds ways to counsel him. Furthermore, a Bodhisattva should mention the good points of others so as to encourage them on the right path and help them develop their potential.
Illustration:
the Lotus Sutra relates
the story of a Bodhisattva named "Never Despise." Whenever he encountered a
layman or cleric, he would approach him, bow down to him, and say aloud, "I dare
not look down on you because you will become a Buddha in the future." This
declaration angered some persons, who would insult and beat him. In response,
Never Despise would simply run far away and repeat, "I dare not look down on you
because you will become a Buddha." Why did the Bodhisattva Never Despise act
that way? It was because he cultivated the practice of seeing everything with
eyes of equality, of respecting all sentient beings equally, as they all have
the Buddha Nature and are all future Buddhas. Another explanation could be that
many cultivators cannot conceive of themselves as future Buddhas. The
Bodhisattva Never Despise was raising their sights, urging them to strive for
the full Enlightenment of Buddhahood.
32. "One can say that the habit of praising oneself and looking down on others is common to most people. That is why wherever we go, if we do not hear a person praise himself, we can hear him speak ill of others. Seldom do we hear anyone speak about his own shortcomings while praising the good points of others. That is why, since ancient times, it has never been easy to create an atmosphere of non-contention and happiness between individuals on this earth. If people got into the habit of "returning the light and looking within", aware every minute, every hour that they still have many shortcomings, while others have many good qualities, there would never be self-congratulation or criticism of others. This is particularly true in the case of Bodhisattvas, who should always admit their own mistakes and never entertain the thought of hiding them. If they were to hide their mistakes, those mistakes would not only not disappear, they would, on the contrary increase in intensity until in time they would control everything. By then, to extinguish them would be impossible. Moreover, not only should Bodhisattvas not hide their shortcomings, they should not boast of their achievements either. To do so would lessen the value of these achievements until in time they would disappear entirely. Then, even if they wanted to boast, they could no longer do so." (Master Yen-p'ei)
"To praise
oneself and speak ill of others necessarily makes other people suffer. Not only
that, such action tends to raise the ego -- the very opposite of the goal of
cultivation. Furthermore, in the Avatamsaka Sutra
(chapter 49), sentient beings are compared to the roots of a tree growing in the
rocks and sand of the barren wilderness, while the Bodhisattvas and Buddhas are
the flowers and fruits. Therefore, Bodhisattvas need sentient beings. How can
they go about criticizing them, unless it is for the purpose of helping them
correct their mistakes?" (Rev. Minh Duc)
33. The Buddhist disciple
becomes angry and loses his temper because the other party keeps asking for
help.
34. This ninth precept includes two parts: (1) being angry and (2) harboring grudges. This precept, like others, takes compassion as its cornerstone. Once anger arises, all compassion is lost. The Bodhisattva should not harbor grudges toward anyone and should gladly forgive the mistakes of others.
Moreover, once we
are reborn in this impure world, we are bound to meet with events that go
against our wishes. When these events occur -- as they are bound to -- we should
keep calm and try to transcend them. What is the use of getting angry or getting
even? Supposing we were lost in the depths of the forest, filled with poisonous
plants, deadly insects and ferocious beasts. We should expect to be pricked by
thorns and bitten by insects. The best course of action is to find a way out of
the forest. To lose one's temper, cursing the thorns and insects, is irrational,
to say the least. (After Master Yen-p'ei)
35. "Few people would dare slander the Buddha. However slandering the Dharma or Sangha is another story. An example of slander of the Dharma is to criticize the Two-Vehicle Teaching as inadequate for all sentient beings. Slandering the Sangha is very common nowadays. If a cleric breaks the precepts, he will receive bad karma, but this does not preclude him from being a good teacher. It is like being lost with a group of people in a deep, dark ravine and among them is a leper who happens to have a torch. A wise person would suppress his revulsion and follow the leper to safety. Please note in this regard the teachings on the Four Reliances, the most important of which is reliance on the Dharma, not on any particular teacher. Moreover, the Buddhist disciple should have a calm mind, free of discrimination in all circumstances. To speak ill of others is to harbor a mind of discrimination, not yet realizing that good and bad, correct and incorrect are in essence non-existent and dream-like." (Rev. Minh Duc)
Note: Major Precept
#8 stems from greed, #9 from anger and #10 from delusion.
36. Someone who falls into
the Three Evil Realms (hell, hungry ghosts, animality) can expiate his offenses
and achieve rebirth in the human realm only after countless years. Only then
will that person be likely to understand family obligations or learn the
teachings of the Buddha. According to Buddhist teachings, cultivation is easier
in the human realm, which contains both hardship and happiness, than in a realm
with too much hardship (Three Evil Realms) or too much happiness (Celestial
Realms).
37. All the Bodhisattva
precepts are based on compassion, on avoiding harm and being of benefit to
others. To break them intentionally is to have no compassion toward sentient
beings and to lose the seed of Enlightenment. One is then cast out of the Sea of
the Dharma and is no longer a Bodhisattva. Note that the most important thing in
cultivation is to develop and nurture the seed of Enlightenment (the Bodhi
Mind), because without that seed, one cannot become a Buddha.
38. This chapter was not
transmitted outside of India.
39. A Buddhist disciple
who is to become an emperor or a high official should first receive the
Bodhisattva precepts because the mistakes made by a person in high position have
wide and far-reaching implications. It is, then, an act of compassion to urge
leaders to study and observe the Bodhisattva precepts so that they can work for
the benefit of the many instead of the few.
40. Why should one rise to
greet and make offerings to Elder Masters? It is because they are the causes and
conditions which help the cultivator attain Enlightenment. To fail to respect
and draw near them is to lose the benefits of their teachings. In accord with the
Dharma: with body, speech and mind (rising to greet them, saying welcoming
words, in all sincerity).
41. No hands for 500 lives: the disciple will be reborn as a worm, reptile, etc. This retribution appears unusually harsh at first sight; however, in Buddhism, the worst karma is to lack wisdom, the consequence of intoxication. Without wisdom, we can never escape Birth and Death and are bound to revolve in samsara not only for 500 lives but even for untold eons!
A story is told
of Mahakasyapa (the senior disciple of the Buddha) visiting the Jeta Grove
accompanied by Anathapindika (a famous benefactor of the Order), and suddenly
catching sight of a black ant scrambling across his path. Drawing
Anathapindika's attention to the insect, he recalled that in untold eons past,
during the times of the six previous Buddhas, he had come across that ant. Now,
under Sakyamuni, the seventh Buddha, he himself had become an Arhat, but the
poor ant, after eons of rebirth, was still just an ant, condemned to scavenge
for scraps of food, condemned to the sufferings of an insect's life -- as devoid
as ever of wisdom!Please note that selling
alcoholic beverages is a major or root offense as opposed to consuming
intoxicants which is only a minor offense. To drink alcohol hurts only oneself,
but to sell alcoholic beverages hurts others and goes against the Mind of
Compassion that a Bodhisattva should nurture at all times.
42.Exception: "When
the Buddha was in the world, King Prasenajit's Queen had received the eight
precepts of a layperson. One time, King Prasenajit wanted to kill his cook. When
his Queen heard about this she wanted to save the cook, so she bedecked herself
in fine adornments, put on fragrant powders, placed flowers in her hair, and
prepared delicious food and wine. Then she took along several ladies-in-waiting
and went to see the King. King Prasenajit was extremely pleased with the wine
and the food, and afterwards the Queen beseeched the King to forgo his idea of
killing the cook. The King consented, and so in this way the cook was saved. The
next day, the Queen went to the Buddha's place and repented. She had already
taken the eight lay precepts, and one of them is that one can't put fragrant
oils or perfumes on one's body or flowers in one's hair. She had
also drunk wine the
previous day...But since the only reason she did all that was because she wanted
to save the cook's life, the Buddha said, "Not only have you not transgressed
the precepts, you actually have gained merit and virtue" (Master Hsuan
Hua).
43. Eating meat not only
goes against the spirit of Great Compassion, it also has far-reaching health
implications as illustrated by the recent refusal of the European Community to
buy American beef from cattle fattened with hormones. See also the following
passage from the Lankavatara Sutra,
the only text recommended by Bodhidharma:
In the present sutra, all meat-eating, in any form, in any manner, and in any place, is unconditionally and once for all, prohibited for all. Thus, Mahamati, meat eating I have not permitted to anyone, I do not permit, I will not permit. Meat eating, I tell you, Mahamati, is not proper for homeless monks (D.T. Suzuki, Lankavatara Sutra, p. 219).
44. Pungent
herbs: "They are: leek, onion,
garlic, and a few other such herbs such as asafoetida, an ingredient common in
curries etc. Eaten raw they are believed to incite people to anger and disputes;
eaten cooked they increase one's sexual desire." Buddhist adepts are advised to
avoid them, as their consumption tends to disturb the peacefulness of the mind.
"According to the [Surangama Sutra],
garlic, three kinds of onions, and leeks are the five forbidden pungent
roots. 'If eaten raw, they are said to cause irritability of temper, and if
eaten cooked, to act as an aphrodisiac; moreover, the breath of the eater, if
reading the sutras, will drive away the good spirits.'"
Note: Much
of the publicized health benefits of garlic and other pungent roots may be
industry-inspired and/or commercial puffery. Buddhist practitioners,
particularly those who recite mantras, are usually advised to avoid them
altogether.
46. In a spirit of compassion, the Buddhist disciple should counsel an offender to practice repentance. He should not watch in silence as the offender repeats the offense.
Offenses arise
from the mind;
Repentance is done by the
mind.
When the mind forgets
them,
The offenses exist no
more.
The
mind forgetting and the
offenses
eradicated,
Both then are
empty.
This is true repentance
and reform.
(Master Hsuan Hua,
tr.)
47. Uposattha:
Semi-monthly gathering of monks and nuns to recite the precepts.
48. Note: It is
incumbent on the host to request the guest master to teach the Dharma as often
as three times a day, time and health permitting.
49. Note the example of the youth Sudhana in the Avatamsaka Sutra, who traveled "south" to some one hundred and ten cities in search of the truth. If it were not for his determination to go wherever required to find the Dharma, how could he finally be admitted to Maitreya's Tower and achieve Enlightenment in one lifetime? An exception to this rule is when one is already fully conversant with a particular sutra or commentary, or when the sutra or commentary is being taught in a language one does not understand.
The sutras teach
that when attending a Dharma lecture, a practitioner should concentrate on
listening and learning the Dharma. He should avoid personal reactions to the
teacher, such as, the teacher i) has/has not violated the precepts; ii) comes
from a poor/wealthy background; iii) has a pleasant/unpleasant physical
appearance; iv) has good diction / a speech impediment; v) has a melodious/harsh
voice.
50. When preaching the
Dharma, a Bodhisattva disciple should always emphasize the development of the
Bodhi Mind. Thus, when teaching the practice of Buddha Recitation, for example,
he should urge his listeners not only to recite the Buddha's name but also to
teach others to do likewise -- all the while seeking rebirth in the Pure Land as
a stepping stone to Buddhahood. An exception to the rule of not turning away
from the Mahayana is when the capacity of the audience is limited and, for
reasons of expediency, can only be taught the Two-Vehicle Path as a stopgap
measure.
51. This precept --
looking after the sick -- exists only in the Bodhisattva
precepts. Reason: The
Bhiksu/Bhiksuni and lay moral codes are based on self-cultivation and
purification, while the Bodhisattva moral code rests on compassion -- compassion
for the sick and helpless. Why are the sick foremost among the Eight Fields of
Blessings? It is because the other Fields of Blessings, including the Buddhas
and sages, derive from our sense of gratitude. We are
grateful to Sakyamuni Buddha for leaving his throne
and luxurious life to find the Path to Enlightenment and teach it to us. The
sick, on the other hand, constitute a Field of Blessing based
on compassion. Since the highest moral attribute in Buddhism is compassion,
the sick represent the foremost Field of Blessings.
52. The following story is
a good illustration of taking care of the sick, as the foremost Field of
Blessings:
During the Han dynasty, an official named Yuan-Nang murdered an official named Ch'ao Ts'o. Afterwards, day and night, he saw the ghost of Ch'ao Ts'o coming to take revenge. Realizing his mistake, he left home and became a Bhiksu, cultivated vigorously, and was no longer troubled by the ghost. Because he did not encounter the ghost again, he vowed to become a Bhiksu in his succeeding lives and became a great, renowned Dharma Master who lectured on Sutras and taught widely, coveting neither fame nor wealth. For ten lives he cultivated diligently and met no more ghosts. He rose to a higher and higher position in every life until, in his tenth life, he became the Emperor's teacher and was given the title "National Master." The Emperor made him a gift of an aloeswood chair, the kind only emperors used. It was so handsome and beautifully carved that when National Master Wu Ta sat down on it he suddenly thought, "Just how many Dharma Masters are there as lofty as I? How many have received a gift from an Emperor as fine as this chair?" His one thought of arrogance laid him open for the attack of the revengeful ghost of Ch'ao Ts'o of ten lives past. Instantly, one of his legs began to swell, and a sore which had the shape of a human face formed on it. It was complete with a mouth, nose, eyes, and ears. Not only that, it could talk. "You want to get away from me, " it would say, "but you can't. I am determined to take your life." It also demanded to be fed, and would eat only fresh, raw meat. If Wu Ta didn't give meat to the sore, it would cause him unbearable pain. Even though he was a National Master, Wu Ta had no way to get rid of the sore ... Earlier, National Master Wu Ta had taken care of the Venerable Kanaka when the latter's body had broken out with noxious boils. He had waited on him, served him broths and medicines, and had cured him. At that time, the Venerable Kanaka had said to him, "In the future, no matter what difficulty besets you, no matter how insoluble your problem may seem, come to such and such a place in Szechwan and I will find a way to help you. Wu Ta had no recourse but to find Kanaka in Szechwan. The Venerable Kanaka used "samadhi water" to wash Wu Ta's sore, and the human face disappeared. Actually, the Venerable Kanaka, who was a fourth stage Arhat, did not really have an illness. He deliberately manifested a disease as a method to save National Master Wu Ta in the future. (Master Hsuan Hua)53. Not looking after the sick (Minor precept No. 9) is to fail to save lives, while storing weapons is to create the conditions for actually destroying life. Both go against the Mind of Compassion of a Bodhisattva.
54. A Bodhisattva disciple
should not avenge even the death of his parents because this would be killing
the parents of a past lifetime to
avenge the parents of the current lifetime.
Such action goes counter to the spirit of compassion -- the very marrow of
Buddhism. Note in this regard the concept of filiality in Note 16.
During the Ch'ing Dynasty in China, in Yang Chou, there was a person named Ch'eng Pai Lin. One day he had a dream in which Avalokiteshvara Bodhisattva told him, "Tomorrow the Ch'ing army will arrive. Out of the seventeen people in your household, sixteen will survive. But you cannot escape your fate. Tomorrow Wang Ma Tze will kill you, because in a past life you stabbed him twenty-six times and killed him." Then Avalokiteshvara Bodhisattva added, "There is still an expedient method that may work. Prepare a fine feast tomorrow, and when he comes, invite him to eat with you. Afterwards, allow him to kill you. Perhaps that will change things."
The dream was vivid and when Ch'eng Pai Lin awoke the following morning, he went out and bought wine and vegetables, brought them back, and had a feast prepared. Then noontime came, someone knocked at the door. He opened the door and said, "Are you Wang Ma Tze?" "How strange," said the man at the door, "I'm from the north, how did you know my name?" His host invited him in and said, "... You're welcome; I've prepared a feast for you. Won't you join me?" Then he related the dream he'd had the night before. "Last life I killed you with twenty-six stabs of a knife, and so this life you have come to kill me. After we've finished this meal, you can do it." Wang Ma Tze pondered over this and said, "But if you killed me last life, and I kill you this life, won't you kill me again next life? It will just go on and on. No, I won't kill you." Then he took his knife and scratched twenty-six marks on his host's back to represent that the debt had been repaid. Not only did Wang Ma Tze not kill his host, but afterwards they became very good friends. Wang said to his host, "The Ch'ing army is following en masse. They are not reasonable, so the best would be for you and your family to go to Su Chou. It's safe there." So that is what Ch'eng Pai Lin did. This is a case of turning grievance into friendship and reversing the retribution that is due one. From this you can see that it's possible to alter one's fate. (Master Hui Seng)
In Buddhism,
the more offenses a person commits and the heavier these offenses are, the more
a Bodhisattva should have compassion for him. Buddhism exists because there are
people who commit infractions and offenses. Thus, the most revered and most
popular Bodhisattvas of the Mahayana always live in places of great turmoil and
suffering.
55. A Bodhisattva should
not act as a country's emissary for the purpose of spying or fostering war.
However, if he were to do so to put an end to war or military confrontation, he
would be acting in a spirit of compassion. The key words in this precept
are for personal benefit or
evil intention.
56. To sell human beings
and domestic animals is to make one's living off the life of others; to
sell coffins and products connected with the disposal of corpses is to make
one's living off the death of others.
Unconsciously, if not consciously, one is happy to see others die, since one's
livelihood is dependent on the number of deaths. The offense can be subtle -- in
the rejoicing mind -- or not so subtle, as demonstrated by periodic exposures of
questionable practices in the funeral industry. (See US News and World
Report, March 23, 1998.) To make one's living off the life and death of
others is to lack compassion, the very essence of Mahayana Buddhism. Therefore,
all professions or trades connected with the above are forbidden to aspiring
Bodhisattvas.
57. This secondary precept 13 is related to major precept 7 (praising oneself and disparaging others) and major precept 10 (slandering the Triple Jewel). The offense committed here is secondary because: a) unlike in major precept 7, there is no self-praise and b) unlike in major precept 10, the objects of slander are virtuous persons, which include the Sangha (the community of monks and nuns) but not the Triple Jewel as a whole (Buddha, Dharma, Sangha).
More important, this secondary precept 13 deals specifically with slander without cause. For a follower of the Two Vehicles (Theravada), this type of slander is a major offense, because it is immoral. (The emphasis here is on the personal integrity of the slanderer.) However, for a Bodhisattva, it is a secondary offense, because baseless slander can be refuted and is thus less likely to do permanent damage to the victim than slander based on fact. (The emphasis in this instance has shifted to the well-being ofthe victim -- compassion being the basis of Bodhisattvahood.) (After Master Yen-p'ei)
This example
illustrates the major difference between the Bodhisattva and other precepts. See
also note 62.
58. This precept refers to the setting of fires for farming and other such necessary purposes. Otherwise, the offense would be that of killing or stealing (Major precepts No. 1 and No. 2).
In Asia, the period between the fourth and ninth months coincides with the reproductive cycles of such insects as ants and earthworms. Therefore, the Buddha forbade the setting of fires during those periods, out of a spirit of compassion toward all creatures, however lowly and helpless.
Note: The blanket
bombing of enemy targets, common in modern warfare, can be subsumed under this
precept. Even when not many persons are harmed, tremendous destruction may be
wrought on other sentient beings, seen and unseen, as well as on the
environment.
59. To the followers of
the Monastic Tradition (i.e., early Buddhism or Theravada), the attainment of
the state of Arhat is the ultimate goal. They are attached to that teaching as
the orthodox and highest form of Buddhism. For Mahayanists, such a goal is
limited and unwholesome. Therefore, unless a person cannot
profit from Mahayana teachings, it is an offense for a Bodhisattva to teach
the Two Vehicle Tradition. To do so would cause sentient beings to lose the
great benefit of Supreme Enlightenment and Buddhahood.
60. Wholesome mind: in the Mahayana context, means to seek Buddhahood and to rescue all sentient beings.
Why should a
Bodhisattva teach the difficult Bodhisattva renunciation practices to a novice
coming from afar? It is to test his capacity as a potential Bodhisattva and
strengthen his resolve for the difficult tasks ahead. Moreover, to succeed in
cultivation, a novice must cultivate a wholesome mind
(seek Buddhahood and rescue sentient beings). To do so, he has to (1) set aside
the ego/sever the attachment to the self (burn one's body...) and (2) be willing
to sacrifice himself for sentient beings (forsake his body for starving
beasts...). Unless the novice is ready to make such commitments, he is not a
good "vessel of the Dharma" and is likely to fail.A famous example of such
commitment is the story of Master Hui-k'o, the second patriarch of Zen, who
knelt in the snow for days and finally cut off his arm, to persuade Bodhidharma
to accept him as a disciple.N.b. This precept
is directed specifically at monks and nuns, as an example of the Bodhisattva
ideal. See also The Seeker's Glossary
of Buddhism, under "Generosity".
61. The offenses described
here are relatively minor, such as charging high rent or high interest on loans.
Otherwise, the transgressions would be the major offense of stealing (second
major precept). On filial piety, see note 16.
62. Principles of the Bodhisattva precepts: The Sravaka precepts were promulgated by the Buddha as the offenses actually arose. They were expressly devised for monks and nuns and are to be taken only by them. The Bodhisattva precepts, on the other hand, are the precepts of the Mind, and are common to all sentient beings. Therefore, they can be observed by all.
The essence of the Buddha
Nature includes such qualities as compassion, filiality, etc. Each of us
intrinsically possesses the Buddha Nature, the primary cause of
Buddhahood. Observance of the Bodhisattva precepts creates the conditions for the
Buddha Nature to manifest itself. When cause and conditions come together, the
result is Buddhahood. This is referred to as the "essence of the Buddha
Nature".
63. Bodhisattvas engage in countless cultivation practices. One such practice is to light incense and then either place the incense pieces on a large incense burner before the image of a Buddha or, alternatively, raise a small burner to one's forehead and recite verses of praise or mantras while facing the Buddha. If a disciple, out of envy, gossips about a Bodhisattva who engages in these practices (calling him a fake and a showoff, for example), the disciple commits a secondary offense.
This precept is
similar to precept 13, but differs with respect to the goal of the offender. In
precept 13, the aim of slandering monks in particular is to defame them and make
them lose offerings, while in this precept it is to cause discord within the
Sangha.
64. "Throughout the eons
of time, all male sentient beings have been my father; all female sentient
beings have been my mother. I was born of them." This is a poetical way to
express the truth that we are all related throughout the eons of time, and thus
to save sentient beings is to save one's family and ultimately oneself.
65. Precept #20 has two parts, the first part concerning the living and the second part the deceased.
(1) In the first part, there are two related concepts, "rescue and protect" and "rescue and deliver". The first concept relates to the potential victim, while the second concept embraces the killer as well. To help both, it is necessary to develop the killer's sense of compassion. Once there is true compassion, all killing ceases, and both the killer and the victim are liberated. Thus, the sutra states: "the disciple should always teach the Bodhisattva precepts to rescue and deliver sentient beings." (2) Furthermore, not only the living, but also the dead, should be liberated. Therefore, monks and nuns should be invited to explain the Bodhisattva sutras and precepts on the death anniversaries of parents and other kin.
Note: "If
a Bodhisattva sees an animal on the verge of being killed, he must devise a way
to rescue and protect it":
Now, if you wish to save a certain being but it's beyond your capacity, then you should singlemindedly recite the Buddha's name. For example, you may see some pigs or sheep that are about to be slaughtered, and you can't liberate them because you aren't able to buy them all. At this time you should singlemindedly recite the Buddha's name so those creatures can hear it. You can speak Dharma also. You can say to them, "All of you living beings should bring forth the Bodhi resolve [Bodhi Mind].'" This is creating causes and conditions for rescuing their wisdom-light (Mind). Although you are not saving their physical bodies, you are rescuing their wisdom-light. (Master Hui Seng)66. When a Buddhist dies, it is the practice for relatives to recite the sutras and perform other meritorious acts, transferring all the merits to the dead. This helps the deceased achieve rebirth in the Pure Lands ("behold the Buddhas") or, alternatively, to obtain a good rebirth in the human or celestial realms. Rebirth in the Pure Land of Amitabha Buddha is the aim of many Mahayana Buddhists, as this is viewed as a realistic goal, considering the circumstances of ordinary human beings in the Saha World. See also note 94, last part.
67. A Bodhisattva must not return anger for anger. This is because wherever there is anger, all compassion is lost. "To seek revenge and maim and kill and prosecute" is to create the causes of future sufferings and ensure that they will never end. Even today, this lesson has unfortunately not been learned despite all the hindsight available to us from past warfare and genocide: "President Clinton came [to Kigali] today to talk to scarred and mutilated survivors of the 1994 genocide in Rwanda and to acknowledge that the world could have protected them, though it did not . . . Both in his meeting with the victims and the speech to an invited audience here, Mr. Clinton called for sharper vigilance against genocide and swifter prosecution of its perpetrators ..." (NY Times: March 26, 1998).
N.B. Buddhists do not
cultivate a sense of vengefuless because they realize that sentient beings know
only Cause and Effect in the present, but not in past or future lifetimes. The
present perpetrators might have been the victims in a previous lifetime; thus,
to exact retribution now may be to jeopardize the parents of one lifetime in
order to avenge the parents of another! This truth can be glimpsed in the
current wave of ethnic conflicts in Africa and the Balkans. See also secondary
precepts 10 and 21 as well as note 64.
68. "According to the Brahma Net and Avatamsaka Sutras, we should ignore appearances and external forms when seeking a good teacher. For example, we should disregard such traits as youth, poverty, low status or lack of education, unattractive appearance or incomplete features, but should simply seek someone conversant with the Dharma, who can be of benefit to us. Nor should we find fault with good spiritual advisors for acting in certain ways, as it may be due to a number of reasons, such as pursuing a hidden cultivation practice or following an expedient teaching. Or else, they may act the way they do because while their achievements may be high, their residual bad habits have not been extinguished. If we grasp at forms and look for faults, we will forfeit benefits on the path of cultivation.
"Thus, when Buddha Sakyamuni was still alive, the Bhikshu Kalodayin was in the habit of moving his jaws like a buffalo; a certain Bhikshuni used to look at herself in the mirror and adorn herself; another Bhikshu liked to climb trees and jump from one branch to another; still another always addressed others in a loud voice, with condescending terms and appellations. In truth, however, all four had reached the stage of Arhatship. It is just that one of them was a buffalo in a previous life, another was a courtesan, another was a monkey, and still another belonged to the Brahman class. They were accustomed to these circumstances throughout many lifetimes, so that even when they had attained the fruits of Arhatship, their residual habits still lingered."We also have the example of the Sixth Patriarch of Zen. Realizing that the cultivators of his day were attached to a literal reading of the sutras and did not immediately recognize their Buddha Nature, he took the form of an ignorant and illiterate person selling wood in the marketplace. Or else, take the case of a famous Zen Master who, wishing to avoid external conditions and concentrate on his cultivation, took the expedient appearance of a ragged lunatic, raving and ranting. As a result, both distinguished Masters were criticized during their lifetimes. The Sixth Patriarch was faulted for his ignorance, while the Zen monk was called insane and berserk. Therefore, finding a good spiritual advisor is a difficult task indeed" (Thich Thien Tam, Buddhism of Wisdom and Faith).69. A Bodhisattva should not follow the Two Vehicle teachings or worldly teachings because they all have one principle in common: the rejection of the concept of Buddha Nature as basic to all sentient beings.
There are exceptions to this
precept not to study and practice non-Mahayana teachings. "If one needs to
understand worldly doctrines in order to rescue people from the world, then one
can study those doctrines. However, if one studies them with the sole purpose of
benefitting oneself and fails to seek Supreme Enlightenment, then it is not
permissible to study them." (Master Hui Seng)
70. "What is meant by skillfully administering the resources of the Three Jewels? If one receives goods for the Buddha Jewel but uses them for the Dharma Jewel, this is misusing goods. Or, if one receives them for the Sangha Jewel but uses them for the Buddha Jewel, that is also misusing goods. In Buddhist teachings, it becomes clear that Cause and Effect are quite complicated. If money is given to repair an image of Sakyamuni Buddha and the money is used to print sutras instead, then one has used the Buddha Jewel money for the Dharma Jewel.
Misuse of funds of the Triple
Jewel in this way is considered stealing. If one is not very clear about the
precepts, however, one may not realize this and assume that as long as the money
is used for the Triple Jewel, it is permissible." (Master Hui Seng)
71. To pawn
himself, or cut off and sell his own flesh: is a figure of speech for
selling one's physical labor or one's intellectual labor. (Master Tri
Quang)
72. "All visiting Sangha members should be invited to receive offerings in accord with their position in the Sangha (seniority of ordination). They are part of the assembly that keeps the precepts and, as such, should receive their share of the offerings. If one does not offer a visiting Sangha what he rightly deserves, if one is greedy for profit and receives individual offerings, that is a violation of the precept against stealing." (Master Hui Seng)
N.B. In ancient times, a
meal offering was a particularly welcome opportunity, as it spared the clerics
the time and effort of the alms round and allowed them more time for
practice.
73. This precept specifically prohibits a cleric from seeking invitations and donations for himself personally. In the regulations on offerings there is a stanza that stipulates:
Above, offerings should go to the
Buddhas of the Ten Directions;
In the middle, to the community of
monks;
Below, to all
sentient beings of the Six Realms.
Offerings belong to all without
distinction.
Moreover, the offerings destined for the community of monks belong to all monks and nuns, not only those residing at the temple, but also to current visiting monks and nuns as well as future visitors. Thus, technically, the offerings should be divided equally among all those present, with a portion set aside for future visiting monks.
This editor remembers visiting a
temple in India and upon seeing goods piled up in corner rooms, thinking to
himself that the temple was too wealthy. Later he realized that these goods had
been set aside for visiting monks in observance of this precept!
74. It is very important to issue invitations to monks and nuns according to their proper order or seniority according to the time of their full ordination as a Bhiksu or Bhiksuni. This is to avoid discord and dissension within the assembly, with popular monks receiving the bulk of the invitations and others receiving none. For a layperson to fail to respect this precept is to lose deep merit and virtue, as he would, in effect, disrupt the harmony of the Sangha. Thus, to issue a discriminatory invitation goes against the spirit of compassion and non-discrimination that all Buddhists, particularly Bodhisattvas, should nurture.
Furthermore, to offer a
discriminatory invitation even to 500 Arhats is not necessarily meritorious
because the degree of merit or virtue depends on three factors: the recipient,
the gift and, most important, the mind of the giver. If the gift is
presented with a mind of compassion and equanimity, with no thought of gift,
recipient or giver, then the merits accrued become infinite. Otherwise, they are
limited. See in this connection the Vimalakirti Sutra.
75. Seven
Buddhas: Sakyamuni Buddha and the six Buddhas who preceded him. By
extension, it means all the Buddhas.
76. Prostitution: This is probably an injunction against the ancient Indian custom of temple prostitutes (devadasi).
In general, an improper livelihood
is any occupation that is contrary to the spirit of compassion toward sentient
beings. Such occupations include not only traditional ones like fisherman and
hunter but also working in slaughter houses or ammunition factories. In the
sutras, the Buddha even forbade monks and nuns from tilling the soil, planting
crops, or pressing seeds to get oil because such actions often result in the
killing of small animals and insects. (Laymen, being subject to a lesser
standard of morality, are not prohibited from engaging in such activities.
Moreover, they may even be given the opportunity to earn merit and virtue
through service to the clergy. Monks and nuns, relieved of daily chores, can
then concentrate on their main calling -- practicing the Dharma for the benefit
of all.)
77. Matchmaking
is singled out in this precept because it creates the karma of attachment,
the very cause of endless births and rebirths within Samsara. A
Bodhisattva, motivated by compassion for the suffering of all sentient beings in
the cycle of existence, cannot be a party to the creation of such karma. (See
also note 28.)
78. Six days of fasting, three months of fasting. Fasting in this context means not eating after noontime.
In popular Buddhism, the
special days and months of fasting are explained as special times when the
celestial rulers of this galaxy go on their inspection trips to assess the
compliance of human beings with the basic moral tenets. Therefore, people watch
themselves during those times and are on their best behavior by abstaining from
all offenses! On a deeper level, this is an expedient means of bringing
practitioners gradually to a pure style of living all year.
79. This precept
deals with offenses from the point of view of timing. From that
perspective, killing or stealing at particular times (fasting days) constitutes
a minor offense, on top of the major offense.
80. This Chapter
was not transmitted outside of India -- see Introduction.
81. Selling
Bodhisattvas, Bhiksus, Bhiksunis, can be understood literally (as in time of
war) but can also refer to those who take advantage of Buddhism to further their
personal interests, financial and otherwise. Examples that immediately come to
mind are salespeople who gain clients through connections with the clergy as
well as politicians on the lookout for votes.
82. A Bodhisattva should not sell knives. The Bodhisattva precepts are the precepts of the Mind-Nature. Thus, if one were to store knives and clubs to kill and maim, it would be against the spirit of compassion inherent in the Mind-Nature and therefore against the precepts. However, if knives are stored as kitchen utensils, such action does not go against the spirit of compassion, and therefore is not against the precepts.
Confiscation of
possessions: As theft, confiscation of property is a major offense. However,
in this context, the emphasis is on the abuse of power, which constitutes a
secondary offense.
83. A Bodhisattva should not raise cats, dogs. There are several reasons for this. One is compassion: cats eat other sentient beings, while pigs are raised to be eaten themselves and foxes for their skins or for medicinal purposes. Secondly, raising domestic animals gives rise to feelings of attachment, which is precisely what the cultivator seeks to avoid. It also takes time and effort, which would better be devoted to the "great matter of Birth and Death." Yet, there are exceptions to this rule: to give temporary shelter to a starving cat in the middle of winter is clearly the right thing for a Bodhisattva disciple to do.
Note: Under this precept,
to keep a dog to watch over one's property is not considered an offense for a
lay Bodhisattva.
84. A Bodhisattva cannot watch fights (gang fights, bullfights ...) or armed battles because such action goes against the spirit of compassion. How can a compassionate person watch maiming and killing and derive enjoyment from it? The same goes for being party to gambling, where one party necessarily has to lose.
Note: the key expression
here is "unwholesome intentions." If the Bodhisattva's intention is to mediate
conflict and prevent bloodshed, he not only may watch battles, etc., he may
indeed be obligated to do so.
85. A
Bodhisattva cannot listen to music or attend theatrical performances because he
needs to keep the mind empty and still at all times ...
86. Bhiksu
bound by reeds. In the time of the Buddha, there was a Bhiksu who observed
the precepts to the letter. One day, he was accosted by brigands who stole his
clothes and begging bowl and, fearing reprisal, were about to kill him.
Fortunately, there was someone among them who knew about Buddhism. He said,
"There is no need to kill him. Just tie his hands and feet and leave him among
the living reeds. That will be enough." The Bhiksu thus bound did not move lest
he uproot the fresh reeds and thus break the precept "not to kill." When the
brigands had left, a passer-by saw the monk and untied him. Henceforth, he
became known as the "Bhiksu bound by reeds."
87. Sentient beings are Buddhas-to-be, while the Buddhas are realized Ones. This is the basic tenet of the Mahayana, distinguishing it from Theravada Buddhism and non-Buddhist teachings.
Illustrative Story on Keeping
the Bodhi Mind. A Bodhisattva should maintain the Bodhi Mind in each and
every thought without retrogression: In days of yore, an older master was
traveling along a winding country road, followed by a disciple carrying his
bags. As they walked, they saw lands being tilled while farmers and oxen were
strained to the utmost. Countless worms and insects were maimed or killed in the
process, and birds were swooping to eat them. This led the disciple to wonder to
himself, "How hard it is to make a living. I will cultivate with all my
strength, become a Buddha and rescue all these creatures." Immediately
the Master, an Arhat able to read the thoughts of others, turned around and
said, "Let me have those heavy bags and I will follow you." The disciple was
puzzled but did as instructed, changing places with his teacher and walking in
front. As they continued on their way with the hot sun bearing down on them,
dust swirling all around them, the road stretching endlessly in front, the
disciple grew more and more tired. It wasn't long before he thought to himself,
"There are so many sentient beings and there is so much suffering, how can I
possibly help them all? Perhaps I should try to help myself first."
Immediately, the Master behind him said, "Stop. Now you carry the bags
and follow me." The puzzled disciple did as told, knowing he was not supposed to
ask questions. He took up the bags again and walked behind. This sequence
repeated itself several times. The Master walked in front with the disciple
carrying the bags, then the disciple in front with the Master carrying the bags,
back and forth, until noontime came and they stopped for lunch. Then the
disciple gathered his courage and asked the reason why. The Master said, "When
you had exalted thoughts of saving all living beings, you were a Bodhisattva in
thought, and I as an Arhat had to follow you. But as soon as you had selfish
thoughts of saving yourself only, you were no longer a Bodhisattva, and being
junior to me in years and cultivation, you had to carry my bags."
88. See
Introduction (Characteristics of the Sutra).
89. The word
"parents" refers to our fathers and mothers through the eons, i.e., all sentient
beings. The words "good spiritual advisors" can include a friend or even an
enemy since both can teach us aspects of the truth. Note the concept of
"adverse-conduct" Good Spiritual Advisor. In the Lotus Sutra, Devadatta
was such a person who, through constant goading, allowed Sakyamuni Buddha to
perfect the paramita of patience. The Buddha thus attained Supreme Enlightenment
faster than He would have, had it not been for the constant thorn in His side
that Devadatta represented.
90. The general
point of the resolutions is to cut down on the poison of greed. The Buddhist
disciple should rather die than break the precepts. Why? Because death concerns
only this present life while breaking the precepts can cause suffering
over many lifetimes.
91. Precept 36, which applies to clerics, can be summarized as five main groups of resolutions:
(1) to abstain from sexual
relations with anyone;
(2)
to earn the offerings of the laity (clothing, food, shelter ...) by faithfully
observing the precepts;(3) to
earn the respect of the laity by faithfully observing the precepts;(4) to control the mind of attachment to
the five dusts (form, sound, fragrance, taste and touch);(5) to help all sentient beings attain
Buddhahood.
The most important resolutions are
the last two.
92. A disciple
should not travel to dangerous areas as this would be flirting with death -- the
taking of his own life -- an offense against Major precept no. 1. Moreover, as a
Bodhisattva, he should not provoke others to incur evil karma through harming
him.
93. This precept
establishing the order of seating, i.e., the ranking of a monk by his sacerdotal
age (the date he took the precepts) only, is revolutionary, considering that it
was promulgated more than 2,500 years ago.
An important exception to this seniority
rule is made for those who lecture on the Dharma. In this case, anyone,
including a layperson, can deliver Dharma talks and even Dharma Masters should
listen if the need arises. This custom is expressed in the well-known saying,
"The novice speaks the Dharma, the Dharma Masters listen."(The novice referred to here is Master Wu
Ta, who lectured on the Lotus Sutra to the Fourfold Assembly at the age
of 15! See also note
52.)
94. This precept is divided into two parts. "When the precept tells people to establish monasteries and temples, it is so they can cultivate blessings; when it tells people to explain the Great Vehicle Sutras, it is so they can cultivate wisdom." (Master Hui Seng)
A practitioner should have a clear understanding of the causes and conditions of calamities and fortunate events. These occur as a result of bad or good karma -- and karma has its source in the mind. Reciting or explaining sutras has the power to change a wicked mind into a pure mind, a deluded mind into an enlightened mind. Thus, to recite or explain sutras is to create good karma, enabling sentient beings, alive or dead, to escape or mitigate the impact of negative karma. Since a Bodhisattva's mission is to rescue sentient beings and guide them to enlightenment, he should recite and explain Mahayana sutras on all occasions, and particularly during the ceremonies for the dead. (Master Prajna-Suddhi)
More than a century ago, in his
extensive study of the Brahma Net Sutra, the Dutch clergyman Dr. J.J.M.
de Groot wrote:
Recitation and lectures on the [Amitabha] Sutra, accompanied by ritual services ... [are held not only for deceased monks but] also for laypersons every seven days for seven consecutive weeks, if the family of the deceased so desires and can afford them ... These ceremonies for the dead are special events in their own right and, as long as they last, the family life of all concerned becomes topsy-turvy ... Suffice it to say that these ceremonies are almost never neglected, thus making the 39th precept of the Bodhisattva Code one of those which exercise the most practical influence on the life of the Chinese. (Le Code du Mahayana en Chine, p. 146.)
Ceremonies for the dead are in
fact the best occasions to meet and teach the living!
95. A disciple of the Buddha should explain Mahayana sutras and moral codes to all sentient beings. From the point of view of the early schools of Buddhism, the Dharma is a precious jewel and it should therefore not be given out without the proper request.
From the point of view of the
Mahayana tradition of being of benefit to all sentient beings, the Bodhisattvas
should freely share and make it available to all. Sentient beings are upside
down and deluded. How can they know about the Dharma and request it?
96. The Buddha
taught that monks and nuns should wear garments of a different hue from those
worn by ordinary persons. Their clothes should also be different in cut and
appearance and their heads should be shaved. However, these distinctive features
are also found among other people. For instance, some convicts shave their heads
in American prisons, while in China, certain groups of religious people wear
robes similar in appearance and color to those of Buddhist monks and nuns. The
truly distinguishing features of a Buddhist cleric could be the marks on the top
of his head, the result of voluntarily burning dots with incense on the day of
his full ordination.
97. Precept 40 emphasizes that the Bodhisattva precepts should be conferred upon everyone, but goes on to exclude those who have committed any of the Five Cardinal Sins.
While this may appear contradictory, it actually is not. In the egalitarian spirit of Buddhism, everyone should be able to take the Bodhisattva precepts. However, the purpose of conferring any precept is to benefit the recipients and lead them to Enlightenment. With their heavy karma and strong guilt feelings (always sad, nervous and self-reproachful), those who have committed the Cardinal Sins are not normally good vessels for the precepts. They may even denigrate the precepts, creating even more negative karma. Thus, to withhold the precepts temporarily while advising them to engage in sincere repentance is a realistic course of action. This notwithstanding, those who have sincerely repented and demonstrated their true change of heart may, under certain circumstances, receive the precepts. (Even King Ajatasatru, guilty of patricide, was able to repent and become an Arhat.) This is in conformity with the pre-eminent role of the mind in Buddhist teaching and the all-compassionate spirit of Buddhas and Bodhisattvas.
The Dharma rules prohibit monks
and nuns from paying respect and bowing to kings, parents, relatives. Monks
and nuns represent the Dharma, which should not be subject to (or seen as
subject to) temporal authority. More fundamentally, the clergy should not rely
on ("bow to") advice and teachings outside the Dharma.
98. People with heterodox views. From the Mahayana point of view, any person who does not develop the Bodhi Mind (the Mind of rescuing all sentient beings, leading them to Supreme Enlightenment and Buddhahood) is heterodox and limited.
An exception is made in the case of kings, rulers or high officials, to whom the Brahma Net Sutra should be taught, even if they are not Buddhists or hold heterodox views. This is because a ruler's views can influence multitudes, and Bodhisattvas, out of compassion for the many, should make an attempt to expose him to the compassionate teachings of the Buddhas.
N.B. In precept 39, the
Buddha taught that a Bodhisattva should explain the Mahayana sutras and moral
codes (i.e., the Brahma Net Sutra) to all sentient beings, regardless of
time and place. In precept 42, on the other hand, He forbids the recitation of
the Bodhisattva precepts to those who have not received them or to externalists.
This seeming contradiction is understood as follows. In precept 39, the Buddha
was speaking from the point of view of rescuing and liberating sentient
beings, while in precept 42, He was speaking from the viewpoint of
preventing evil karma. Thus, those who have not received the precepts
may not attend the monthly Uposattha recitation, which includes
confessions of offenses, as they may then tend to criticize the "sinners" and
incur negative karma for themselves. On the other hand, anyone can listen to the
sutra itself on other occasions and benefit thereby.
99. "This precept is referring to people who deliberately decide to break the precepts. It prohibits the intent to violate precepts before one has actually violated them." (Master Hui Seng). If a particular precept is actually violated, the offense depends on the specific violation.
If a Bodhisattva monk develops thoughts of violating the precepts, he is unworthy of receiving any of the offerings from the faithful. A story is told in the sutras of three deities who were washing a Bhiksu's robe in the Ganges but could not hold it under water. Yet, as soon as they took a single grain of rice donated to a temple and placed it on the robe, the robe sank to the bottom. The story illustrates how important offerings of the believers are, particularly if they are made with a pure mind. If a monk or nun accepts such offerings, but does not cultivate the precepts, these offerings become great liabilities, leading the errant cleric down the path of perdition. Even deities and ghosts follow such a cleric and sweep away his very footprints to prevent anyone from following his example.
Animal, wooden stump. A
monk who breaks the precepts, who is unclear about what constitutes keeping or
breaking them, is no different from a sentient being driven by instinct or an
inanimate object. Therefore, he is "no different from an animal or a wooden
stump".
100. One way to
observe this precept nowadays is to print and distribute Mahayana sutras and
commentaries free or for a nominal charge, for the benefit of all. The great
teachings on the Buddha Nature are contained in the Mahayana sutras; therefore,
one should revere the sutras by adorning and displaying them.
101. The
essence of Mahayana teachings is to help all sentient beings develop the Bodhi
Mind, and create the causes and conditions of full Enlightenment. Sentient
beings here, of course, include animals as well as unseen deities and ghosts.
Thus, the sutra says that wherever he goes, be it crossing a mountain, entering
a forest, crossing a river or walking in a field, a Bodhisattva should help all
sentient beings develop the Bodhi Mind. Teaching the Dharma to animals and
ghosts, for example, can benefit them, because their minds are then influenced
by the compassionate words of the Bodhisattvas. Thus, this precept contains the
expression "concentrate and say aloud". See, for example, the following
anecdote:
There's ... an incident from the Buddha's time. There were Bhiksus in the assembly who had certified to Arhatship. Some of them were old and didn't have any teeth. When they recited the Sutras, they didn't sound very eloquent. This prompted a [novice] to say, "When you recite the Sutras, you sound like a bunch of dogs barking." Just because of this one sentence of slander, in his next life he fell into the destiny of a dog.One of the bhikshus he slandered was an Arhat. If he had slandered an ordinary person, he would have had bad karma, but it would not have been so bad. But because he scolded a sage, in his next life he became a dog. Because he was a dog, he had the habits of a dog, and he liked to steal food to eat. He would grab tidbits from the kitchen of his master. Once, his master saw this and cut off the dog's four legs and threw him out onto the grass. The dog was yelping in pain. Shariputra happened to walk by at that point. He spoke Dharma for the dog, telling him, "You know, the Four Elements are really suffering. Your body is false. Put it down; don't get angry." After Shariputra spoke Dharma, the dog didn't yelp anymore, and he died in peace, passing away quite happily. Since at the moment of his death he didn't give rise to anger, he was reborn again as a person and left the home life at seven years of age under Shariputra. Shariputra spoke the Dharma for him, at which point he certified to Arhatship. So you see, this person was once a novice, then he became a dog, and then he became a person again.
When he was a dog, he still retained the good roots from his past lives, and that's why he could understand human speech. Since he died happily, in his next life he became a left-home person again. After that, he never took the full Bhikshu precepts; he wanted to stay a novice forever so he could serve his teacher Shariputra, to repay his kindness ...Therefore, if animals and transformation beings can understand the Dharma Master's words, they can take these precepts. Of course, if they don't understand, they can't take them. (Master Hui Seng)
There are many ways to teach
sentient beings: verbal teachings, bodily teachings, and
mental teachings. The verbal form of the Dharma, the most common among
humans, is the least effective and the least efficient. If one does not have the
capacity to teach verbally, one can teach via one's behavior (bodily teaching).
This is one of the methods used by the Buddha: upon seeing His marks of
greatness, people develop respect and become his disciples. The last form of
teaching, mental teaching, is done by silent vows and dedication of
merit.
102. Why should a Dharma Master occupy a high seat while speaking the Dharma? It is because sentient beings learn and accept the teachings better when their minds are receptive, i.e., when they have developed eagerness and respect. Furthermore, a Dharma Master should be seated, as it is then easier to keep his mind empty and still.
"There are exceptions to this rule. In the Sanghika Vinaya it says 'a Bhiksu may be running chores and performing affairs for the stupa, the temple or the Sangha. When he goes to the king or sees the lords of estates, and if they should say to him, 'Bhiksu, would you please speak the Dharma for me?' at this time the Bhiksu can't insist that the king sit on a lower seat while he sits on a high chair.' He can't immediately force that type of situation. He can't hold to the letter of the law. This is an exception to the rule." (Master Hui Seng)
A Dharma teacher can be anyone -- a monk, nun, layman, or even an inanimate object such as a meditation cushion. The Avatamsaka and Amitabha Sutras, for example, speak of clouds and trees speaking the Dharma ... Upon watching leaves fall one by one from a tree, a person can awaken to the truth of impermanence -- the transitory nature of all life forms. The youth Sudhana in the Avatamsaka Sutra had fifty-two teachers, ranging from Bodhisattvas, to deities, to courtesans. The story is told in the sutras of a group of people lost in a deep, dark ravine. Among them is a leper who happens to have a torch. A wise person would suppress his revulsion and follow the leper to safety.
Why is a Dharma Teacher or good
spiritual advisor necessary on the path to Enlightenment? It is because he can
nurture our Bodhi Mind and our wisdom -- the two crucial factors in
cultivation.
103. Four kinds of lay disciples: Upasakas, upasikas, as well as ordinary laymen and laywomen.
Note: An originally
well-intentioned disciple might turn against the Dharma out of jealousy of the
respect accorded to the clergy, anger at their criticism of his own mistakes, or
disappointment at the behavior of individual monks and nuns.
104. This precept and secondary precept No. 1 apply exclusively to laymen. Both urge laymen to join hands with the Sangha to protect and preserve the Dharma.
A Bodhisattva should rightfully
receive offerings from all: Whatever a cleric receives is for the benefit of
the Sangha as a whole (and by extension, all sentient beings). Therefore, he
need not thank laypersons for their donations, except as an act of courtesy. In
fact, thanking a donor actually decreases the latter's merits (ego-based giving
vs. altruistic giving) and is thus a disservice to him.
105. If a
Bodhisattva acts in this manner, he is no different from a worm in a lion's
body, eating away at the lion's flesh. The lion is the fiercest of animals,
and when he roars all the other beasts flee. In the same way, people who have
taken the precepts are likened to a lion; no other beings will bother them.
However, just as worms that live in the lion's body dare to feed on the lion's
flesh, so too, disciples within Buddhism can undermine the entire system.
Buddhist disciples themselves are capable of destroying the Dharma, more so than
the people outside Buddhism. (Master Yen-p'ei)
106.
Bodhisattvas are their friends: a reference to the pure lands of the
Buddhas, particularly the Pure Land of Amitabha Buddha, where the faithful will
be reborn in the company of Bodhisattvas and other spiritual friends. See the
Amitabha Sutra:
"Moreover Shariputra, all those born in the Land of Utmost Happiness never fall back. Among them are many whose next birth will be in Nirvana. The number of them is extremely large; there is no reckoning that can tell it. Only in measureless, unlimited, innumerable kalpas could it be told. Shariputra, the beings who hear this ought to make a vow -- a vow to be born in that land. Why should they? Having succeeded thus, all are then persons of the highest virtue; all are assembled in the same circumstances." (H. Seki, tr.)107. The Paramita of precepts is the second of the six Paramitas, or "perfections". See the following story on the "perfection of precepts" and its exceptions:
"Once when the Buddha Shakyamuni was in the world, there were two Bhikshus cultivating in the mountains. One day, one of the Bhikshus went down the mountain to get food and left the other one sleeping. In India at that time, the Bhikshus simply wore their sashes wrapped around them; they did not wear clothing underneath. This Bhikshu had shed his robe and was sleeping nude. He probably was a lazy person, and with no one on the mountain to watch after him, he'd decided to take a nap. At that time a woman happened along, and seeing the Bhikshu, she was aroused and took advantage of him. Just as she was running away from the scene, the other Bhikshu returned from town and saw her in flight. Upon investigation he found out that the woman had taken advantage of the sleeping Bhikshu, and he decided to pursue her, catch her, and take her before the Buddha in protest. He took out after her, and the woman became so reckless that she slipped off the road and tumbled down the mountain to her death. So one Bhikshu had violated the precept against sexual activity and the other had broken the precept against killing. Although the Bhikshu hadn't actually pushed her down the mountain, she wouldn't have fallen if he hadn't been pursuing her.
"'What a mess.' concluded the two Bhikshus. Messy as it was, they had to go before the Buddha and describe their offenses. The Buddha referred them to the Venerable Upali. But when Venerable Upali heard the details, his verdict was that, indeed, one had violated the precept against sexual activity and the other against killing, offenses which cannot be absolved. 'You're both going to have to endure the heIls in the future,' he concluded. Hearing this, the two Bhikshus wept, and they went about everywhere trying to find someone who could help them.
"Eventually, they found the Great Upasaka Vimalakirti, who asked why they were crying. When they had related their tale, he pronounced his judgment that they had not violated the precepts. 'If you can be repentant,' he said, 'then I can certify that you didn't break the precepts.' 'How can that be?' they asked. 'The nature of offenses is basically empty,' replied the Upasaka. 'You did not violate the precepts intentionally, and so it doesn't count. It is an exception.' Hearing this explanation by the Great Teacher Vimalakirti, the two Bhikshus were enlightened on the spot and were certified as attaining the fruition...So there are many exceptions within the prohibitive precepts. But if people always look to the exceptions, they will simply not hold the precepts..." (Master Hui Seng)
N.B. In the above
story, Vimalakirti was referring specifically to the two major precepts of not
killing and abstaining from sexual activities. The two monks did not violate
these precepts because the mind (intent) was not involved. Vimalakirti was not
addressing possible issues of secondary responsibility.
108. The
True Mark of all dharmas is a key concept in this sutra. It refers to the
essence or noumenon of the Bodhisattva precepts, which is "neither born nor
unborn, neither eternal nor extinct, neither the same nor different, neither
coming nor going." In other words, the True Mark of all dharmas = essence of the
Bodhisattva precepts = Emptiness. To observe the Bodhisattva precepts in
the true sense, we have to transcend the ego -- there is no practitioner, no
sentient beings to be saved, no precepts being observed. Otherwise, our practice
is merely a human practice, tainted by ego and self-interest, not a Bodhisattva
practice, not a paramita action. (Rev. Nhat-Chan)
109. See the
famous Zen story of Master Pai-chang and the fox, which warns against
meaningless speculation and debate (and rejection of the law of Cause and
Effect):
"Once there was an old cultivator ... Although he claimed to be a Buddhist, all he cultivated were outside ways. That meant his outlook and knowledge were deviant. One day a person came and asked him, 'You're an old cultivator with a lot of practice behind you, but does a great cultivator fall within Cause and Effect or not?' ... The old cultivator very casually, without a moment's hesitation, replied majestically 'Great cultivators do not fall within Cause and Effect.' He bellowed it out. Now, that sentence might not have seemed important, but when he died he became an old fox ... The old fox ... had some [karmic affinities] with Ch'an Master Pai Chang. It began to turn up at the Master's Sutra lectures, taking on the appearance of an elderly layman with a long white beard and the ruddy face of a child -- for it had spiritual powers by then."(Master Hsuan Hua)
Eventually, the layman/old fox was enlightened by Master Pai Chang, who taught: "Great cultivators are not unclear about Cause and Effect. It is not that they don't come under it; they are not obscure about it." Soon afterward, the layman/old fox died peacefully and was given the last rites of a monk.110. See note 10.
mt/Jan.
2000